On February 15, 1944, US bombers dropped 427 tons of
bombs on the mountain top monastery of Monte Cassino in
Italy. The operation was planned by the US General Ira Eaker at the request of the
Allied ground forces, believing the monastery to be a German stronghold. Very few
enemy troops were there at the time but over 300 women and children from the town
of Cassino, who had fled the fighting and taken refuge in the monastery, were killed.
By the time that the Polish 12th Podolski Lancers, under General Anders, raised
their regimental flag on the ruins of Monte Cassino at 9.30am their casualty rates
were 3,779 killed or wounded. The flag was hastily sewn together from pieces of
a Red Cross flag and soldiers' handkerchiefs. The Monastery was rebuilt after the
war and reconsecrated by Pope Paul VI in 1964. (General Wladyslaw
Anders lies buried in the Polish Cemetery at Monte Cassino.)

The ruins of the Saint Benedict Monastery on Monte Cassino.

OPERATION ‘JERICHO’(February 18, 1944)

Code name for the bombing of Amiens prison in northern
France. Precision-attacked by thirteen Mosquito aircraft, the bombs blasted a hole
3.5 metres wide in the high wall of the prison. Of the 717 inmates a total of 258
escaped. Sadly, 87 prisoners were killed and 182 were recaptured. Many were due
to be executed next day, mostly members of the French resistance, which was why
the daring attack had to be made exactly when and as it was.

The necessary repairs made to the prison wall can still clearly be seen today.

INCREDIBLE ESCAPES(1944)

On the night of 3/4 May, 1944,RAF Sgt.
Jack Worsfold, aged 19, was a tail-gunner on a Lancaster of 101 Squadron.
Its mission was the bombing of German tank concentrations in France prior to D-Day.
A total of 300 Lancasters took part and Worsfolds plane was hit by flak and
set on fire. The plane then blew up killing the rest of the crew. The tail section,
with Worsfold inside, was seen by civilians on the ground to fall some 7,500 feet,
hit some high-tension wires then bounce on to a fir tree before hitting the ground
near the village of Aubeterre. Jack Worsfold crawled out with a broken thigh and
rib fractures. Captured by German soldiers he spent the rest of the war in prison
camps.

In a bombing raid against Stuttgart a Lancaster was hit by an 88 mm ack-ack shell
which tore through the fuel tank engulfing the fuselage in flaming petrol. The tail-gunner,
RAF Sergeant N. Alkamade reached for his parachute only to find
it a mass of flames. He had no other option but to jump and threw himself into the
night at 18,000 feet. The next thing he remembered was opening his eyes to find
himself lying in deep snow in a pine forest. Looking up he noticed broken branches
on the trees that had reduced his speed, the snow did the rest. Soon he was taken
prisoner by the locals who refused to believe his story. An investigation was carried
out and he was released. When he eventually arrived home he carried in his pocket
a certificate signed by a German colonel attesting to the fact that he had fallen
three and a half miles without a parachute.

FIRST GERMAN GENERAL EXECUTEDMarch 22/23, 1944

The first German General executed to be executed
after the war was General der Infanterie Anton Dostler.
On during a small scale operation behind enemy lines in northern Italy, a
group of 15 Italian-Americans of the US 2677th Headquarters Company were on a mission
to blow up an important railway tunnel but were captured and taken prisoner before
the mission (Operation 'Ginny') was completed. They were summarily shot on the instructions
of 55 year old General Dostler who had simply passed on the order from higher authority
(Hitler's Füfrerbefehl of October 18, 1942) which stated that all enemy encountered
in Commando actions were to be executed. The plea of "following superior orders"
did not save Dostler from the firing squad. After a five day trial he was found
guilty of a War Crime and sentenced to death. On November 27, 1944, the Mediterranean
Theatre Commander, Lieutenant General Matthew B. Ridgeway, confirmed the sentence.
At 8 a.m. on the morning of December 1, 1944, General Dostler was tied to a stake
on the firing range of the 803rd Military Police Battalion located near Aversa,
Italy. A black hood was placed over his head, a white marker pinned to his chest
and the order to fire was given to the 12 enlisted men of the US Army who composed
the firing squad. (General Anton Dostler lies buried in the German
War Cemetery at Pomezia some miles south of Rome.)

General Dostler receives the Last Sacrament.

HUNGARIAN JEWS

After Hitler's armies occupied Hungary on March 27, 1944,
(Operation Margarethe) its government actively supported
the Nazis in the deportation of its Jews. Up till 1944, the Hungarian Regent, Admiral
Horthy, had steadfastly refused Hitler's offer to resettle the Hungarian Jews. But
after the occupation, and after Eichmann and his SS units moved in, the deportations
began on May 15, 1944, the first train reaching Auschwitz on the 17th. The pro-German
Government co-operated by ordering its policemen to escort their deportees to Auschwitz.
When their uniforms were seen by the Hungarian prisoners already in the camp, scenes
of "unbelievable jubilation were witnessed as the prisoners ran to the wire cheering
and sobbing in the belief that their policemen had come to rescue them." Around
365,000 Hungarian Jews were transported to their deaths after the occupation of
their country. The majority of women and children were murdered within hours of
their arrival. Fit and healthy men were spared for a while for slave labour. Over
300,000 were still in Hungary awaiting their doom. This included just over 70,000
in the Budapest ghetto (fortunately all these survived the war). French Vichy police
also collaborated in the rounding up of Jews. Starting on August 27, 1942, they
arrested 9,872 Jews in Vichy-controlled Lyon and transported them to Drancy, near
Paris, prior to deportation to Auschwitz.

In an effort to negotiate with the Allies the SS offered to exchange Jews for
1,000 trucks. This offer was rejected and as a gesture of good faith the SS allowed
a train, containing 1,684 Hungarian Jews to leave Budapest for the safety of Switzerland.
The train eventually ended up at the Belsen Concentration Camp near Hanover. There,
the Jews were kept for about six months before being allowed to proceed to Switzerland.
This must be the only recorded case where the SS actually saved Jews.

(Between 1933 and 1938 a total of 453,721 Jewish refugees from
Europe were settled in 27 different countries. The Jewish population of Europe in
1939 was 7,870,700.)

LITTLE BROTHER

Although not generally known, Albert Göring, the younger brother of Reich Marshal
Hermann Göring, was an outspoken anti-Nazi. Arrested several times by the Gestapo,
each time being released by the intervention of the Reich Marshal. Albert was born
near Mauterndorf in 1900 and became a successful businessman and in later life the
Export Director at the Skoda Armament Works in Czechoslovakia. During his work there
he helped many Jews escape the horrors of the Holocaust by forging his brother's
signature on their travel documents. The Jewish wife of composer Franz Lehar was
one of those helped by Albert. Returning to Germany after the war he was everywhere
shunned just because of his name. Living on a government pension he married his
housekeeper as a sign of gratitude so she could receive his pension after he died.
One week later, in 1966, he died,

SWISS NEUTRALITY

On a bombing raid on German military installations near the German/Swiss border
on April 1, 1944, a force of 23 B-24 bombers from the USAF
392nd Bombardment Group, on its 59th mission, inadvertently entered Swiss air-space
and owing to a navigational error mistakenly bombed the Swiss town of Schaffhausen.
Fifty Swiss civilians were killed. The real target was to
have been the chemical works at Ludwigshafen, 120 miles away. In 1949, the US agreed
to pay $64 million in compensation. This was an attempt to secure Switzerland as
an ally in the 'Cold War'. The greedy Swiss demanded that interest be paid on the
$64 million, claiming that the damaged property had not been able to earn any money
since the bombing. This demand was rejected.

The British Royal Air Force also flouted Swiss neutrality a couple of times and
attempted to bomb a ball-bearing factory in Basel suspected of producing ball bearings
for the German Army but both times the bombs missed the target. During the war a
total of 167 American bombers and 12 British bombers made emergency landings in
Switzerland. Severely damaged in combat over Germany and unable to return to their
bases in England their only alternative was to head for neutral Switzerland. In
one day, on March 18, 1944, no less than eleven American bombers made emergency
landings at the Dubendorf airfield. The crews were interned by the Swiss authorities
in camps at Adelboden, Grippen, Les Diablerets and in the notorious punishment camp
at Wauwilermoos (for escapees). They were supposed to be treated like P.O.W.s under
the rules of war but in many cases living conditions were little better than German
concentration camps.

In all, around 1,500 American servicemen were interned in neutral
Switzerland.

HIGHEST NIGHT PHOTO

The highest night photograph of the war was taken on April 18,
1944, over Osnabruck. The RAF Mosquito crew used a target indicator flash
and took the picture from 36,000 feet.

An RAF Mosquito, the most versatile plane of WWII, flying at great altitude.

AIR TRAGEDY

An old B24 Liberator bomber, stripped of all equipment and fitted with a radio
control system to be operated from a 'mother' plane after the B24 crew had baled
out, blew up in mid-air during a trial flight in preparation for 'Operation Aphrodite'
the code name for the bombing of the flying bomb sites on the Continent. An electrical
malfunction triggered the explosion killing the pilot and co-pilot. The pilot was
Lieutenant Joseph Kennedy, the older brother of John F Kennedy
the future President of the USA.

INACCURATE BOMBING

December 6, 1942. Operation 'Oyster'
The RAF daylight bombing raid on the Philips Radio Works at Eindoven, Holland,
now under Nazi control. Fourteen planes were lost but sadly 148 Dutch civilians
lost their lives.

March 13, 1944. In a raid on
Le Mans, France, by RAF Bomber Command, some of the bombs
were dropped short of the mark, killing some 100 civilians. Fifteen locomotives
and around 800 railway freight cars were destroyed. The killing of innocent civilians
during raids on specific targets became an increasingly severe problem for bomber
crews.

April 9/10, 1944. The attack by 186 RAF bombers on the
rail yards at Lille-Deliverance, France, killed 456 civilians
and destroyed over a thousand homes. At the rail yards around 2,000 freight cars
were destroyed.

April 10/11, 1944. One hundred and twenty-two Royal Canadian
Air force Halifax's dropped 600 tons of bombs on the Merelbeke-Melle rail yards
at Ghent, Belgium. Unfortunately, the rail yards being located
in a built-up area, 438 Belgian civilians were killed.

April 19/20, 1944. Around 200 bombers, mostly Canadian
Halifaxes from 46 Group, attacked the rail yards at Noisy-le-sec
near Paris. Many bombs fell on a built-up area of the town destroying over 700 houses
and killing 464 civilians. Some 370 were injured.

March 3, 1945. Over 500 inhabitants of the suburb
of Bezuidenhout, a suburb of The Hague, Holland, were killed
when Allied bombers missed their intended target, the V-2 launching sites in the
Hague Forest, and dropped their bombs on Bezuidenhout.

vital officers: BIGOTS

As D-day approached a special security procedure was put in place to protect
all documents concerning the time and place of the invasion (D-Day). It was the
highest security classification of all. General Eisenhower had ordered that no one
with any knowledge of D-Day be sent on operations where there was the slightest
danger of being captured. Those with such information were called 'Bigots'.
The word is derived from the two words 'To Gib' which was
stamped on papers and baggage of all officers being sent to Gibraltar
prior the invasion of North Africa in November, 1942. The letters were reversed
to form the code-word 'Bigot' and used to list all persons with the secret information
about D-Day. During 'Operation Tiger' ten officers were known to be Bigots. Top
priority was given to find and identify the bodies. Fortunately all bodies were
recovered and the secrets of D-Day were safe.

JEDBURGHS

The code name given to the teams of specially trained men who were parachuted
into France before and after D-Day. Their mission was to link up and co-ordinate
the resistance groups in sabotage and guerrilla warfare against the German occupying
forces prior to and during the Normandy invasion. Men were selected from the British
SOE, the American OSS and the Free French, Belgian and Dutch armies. The name Jedburgh
comes from the southern Scottish town of Jedburgh where most members did their initial
training before moving on to Milton Hall in Cambridgeshire, England. In all, around
280 'Jeds' were formed into teams of three men, one British, one American and one
French. After a punishing period of physical training they were dropped behind enemy
lines from planes of 38 Group squadrons to begin work with the Maquis.
(The story of the Jedburghs only became public after records became
de-classified in 1985.)

DISASTER DURING 'OPERATION TIGER'(April 23-30, 1944)

In preparation for the D-Day landings on Utah beach, the US Forces were conducting
a series of exercises on a stretch of beach called Slapton Sands,
near Plymouth. In an area comprising around 30,000 acres a total of 3,000 people
(750 families) 180 farms with livestock were evacuated. This enormous task had to
be completed in six weeks.

During the actual exercise, while manoeuvring for position in
Lyme Bay on the night of April 27 the landing ships were
attacked by nine German motor torpedo boats, E-boats, from Cherbourg in France.
Two of the landing craft, LST 507 and LST
531 were sunk and others damaged. On board the two landing ships the casualties
were severe, 638 men killed (197 sailors and 441 soldiers) and hundreds injured.
This was more than ten times greater than the casualties sustained in the real assault
on Utah Beach on June 6 (43 Americans killed, 63 wounded). Altogether,
including casualties from other ships and those killed by friendly fire on shore,
a total of 946 Americans gave their lives during Operation Tiger.

CARELESS TALK

In spite of all precautions taken to protect the secrets of D-day, some officers
still engaged in 'Careless Talk'. One such case was that
of US Major General Henry Miller, chief supply officer of the US 9th Air Force,
who, during a cocktail party at London's elegant Coleridge's Hotel, talked freely
about the difficulties he was having in obtaining supplies. He added that things
would ease after D-day declaring that would be before June 15.
(When Eisenhower learned of this indiscretion he ordered that Miller be reduced
to the rank of colonel and sent back to the US where shortly after, he retired from
the service.)

MILLION-TO-ONE

Around midnight on June 5, 1944, Private C. Hillman, of Manchester, Connecticut,
serving with the US 101st Airborne Division, was winging his way to Normandy in
a C-47 transport plane. Just before the jump, Private Hillman carried out a final
inspection of his parachute. He was surprised to see that the chute had been packed
by the Pioneer Parachute Company of Connecticut where his mother worked part time
as an inspector. He was further surprised when he saw on the inspection tag,
the initials of his own mother!

D-DAY

D-Day stands for Designated Day, the actual day on which an operation would begin.
H-Hour, the starting time for the attack to begin. This expression was first used
on September 20, 1918, during World War I. The US First Army issued Field Order
No 8 which read, "The First Army will attack at H-Hour on D-Day
with the object of forcing the evacuation of the St. Michael Salient." After
the landings on June 6, 1944, many believed that the D stood for 'Deliverance.'

On June 28, 1943, a conference code named 'Rattle' was held in a hotel in Largs,
Scotland. It was attended by around 20 Generals, 11 Air Marshals, 8 Admirals, 15
high ranking Americans and 5 equally high ranking Canadians. Presided over by Admiral
Lord Louis Mountbatten. It was at this conference that the uppermost
question of where the Allied armies would land in Europe, was settled.

D-DAY LANDINGS(June 6, 1944)

Utah Beach - 23,250 American troops were landed. US 1st Army and 5th and
7th US Corps.

Omaha Beach - 34,250 American troops were landed. 29th and 1st US Div.

By June 12, 326,000 troops were on the beaches, plus 54,000 vehicles. By July
2, another 929,000 men and 177,000 vehicles were put ashore. The ship armada at
Normandy totalled 6,939 vessels of all kinds. In the 10 days after D-day (June 6
to June 16) a total of 5,287 Allied soldiers were killed. The number of French civilians
killed during the landings has never been established but must number in the hundreds.
From D-Day till the end of the war, British casualties were 30,280
dead and 96,670 wounded.

The only American General to land with the initial seaborne
assault at Utah Beach was Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt, Jr, assistant commander
of the US 4th Division. At age 57 he was also the oldest soldier to come ashore.
Sadly he died in France a month later of a heart attack.

The German surrender was signed 337 days after the D-Day landings.

PIGEONS AT WAR

Thousands of carrier pigeons accompanied the troops to Normandy on D-day and
brought back essential details to Allied Headquarters in a capsule tied to their
legs. A special loft was erected at the secret code deciphering centre at Bletchley
Park. Considered vermin by many, these pigeons, were first used as early as
the year 1150 AD and played an important part in both world wars. News of Wellington's
victory at Waterloo first came by pigeon post. Many of these birds were specially
bred in Belgium prior to 1939. Often used as a distress signal from downed aircraft,
a pigeon named 'Winkie' escaped from a bomber after coming down in the English
Channel in 1943. It flew back 120 miles to its base at RAF Leuchers in Scotland
in time for rescue boats to reach and save the crew of the stricken bomber. Winkie
was awarded the Dickin Medal (the animal version of the Victoria Cross) the first
pigeon to be awarded with the medallion. Many of these pigeons were dropped by specially
designed parachutes to be picked up by members of the French resistance. They were
soon on their way back to Britain with Important information. At this time the Germans
were training Falcons to intercept the pigeons while in flight and many were killed
this way. In all, thirty-two animal VCs were awarded to pigeons during WWII. Founded
by Maria Dickin in 1943, the Dickin Medal was awarded to any animal, bird or dog,
displaying conspicuous gallantry during war. Other Pigeons so awarded were, to use
their code names, William of Orange, the hero of Arnhem,
Mary of Exeter,Duke of Normandy
and Paddy, to name but a few. Managed by the elite division
MI-14, the office in charge of Pigeon operations, these pigeons were responsible
for the saving of thousands of military lives.

The city of Colvi in Italy was occupied by British troops
on October 18, 1943, at 10am, well ahead of schedule. The US Air Force was to bomb
the city an hour later to help the British entry. Attempts by radio to cancel the
raid failed. A pigeon, GI Joe, borrowed from the Americans
at the nearby airfield to accompany the troops, was released with the important
message to cancel the raid, tied to it's leg. It arrived just as the bombers were
about to take off. It is estimated that around a thousand British soldiers could
have died if the raid had proceeded. GI Joe was the only
bird or animal in America to receive the Dickin Medal. It died on June 3, 1961,
aged 18, and can be seen today, mounted, in the Historical Centre at Fort
Monmonth, New Jersey.

WRONG AIRFIELD CHOICE

On June 21,1944, a large force of Allied bombers attacked
the German capital, Berlin. Included in the force were 184 American planes which,
after they had dropped their bombs, decided to continue on to Poltava,
the US shuttle base in the Soviet Union. Later that night the airfield was attacked
by German fighters inflicting heavy damage. A total of 47 B-17s were destroyed and
19 severely damaged. On September 13, these shuttle bases were closed as the advances
of the Red Army placed them too far from the front.

FIRST USE OF NAPALM

First used on July 17, 1944, when US P-38s attacked a
fuel depot at Coutances, near St Lo. The next use of napalm was on April 15, 1945,
when American bombers attacked the Atlantic coast town of Royan at the mouth of
the Gironde. In the Pacific, napalm was used when US forces invaded the island of
Tinian in the Marianas. It was also used in the bombing of Tokyo.
This jellied fuel became the standard fuel explosive, later used
widely - and notoriously - during the Vietnam War.

GÖRING'S VERMEER

In 1944, Hermann Göring paid £165,000 for the painting 'Woman
Taken in Adultery' by the rarest of all Dutch painters, Vermeer. The painting
was found in Emma Göring's home in Austria. It was later proved to be a forgery
by Hans Van Meegeren. In 1945, Van Meegeren was arrested by Dutch authorities and
sentenced to one year in jail. He died just nineteen days after his jail sentence
began. Today, Göring's fake Vermeer is hidden away in the strong
room of the Dutch State Collection in the Hague, never to be shown to the public
or sold.

FIRST D-DAY CASUALTIES

It has been generally accepted that Lieutenant
Den Brotheridge of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry Regiment,
British 6th Airborne Division, became the first British soldier
to be killed in the invasion of Europe(D-Day, June 6, 1944)
While he led his platoon of twenty-one men on the attack on the Orne Canal bridge
at Benouville, he was hit in the neck by a bullet fired from the guns of the German
sentries defending the Pegasus Bridge. Seconds before, a burst of fire from Brotheridge's
Sten-gun killed one of the sentries, seventeen year old Private
Helmut Romer, who became the first German to die in the
defence of Hitler's 'Fortress Europe'.

It has since been discovered that when Lieutenant Brotheridges's
glider landed near the bridge, 29 year old Lance Corporal Fred
Greehalgh of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, drowned
when exiting the glider. This would make him the first D-Day casualty. Just months
before the 50th anniversary of the landings, the Pegasus Bridge was demolished and
part of it was rebuilt and placed in the nearby Pegasus Bridge Museum
where visitors can now walk walk over it.

Meanwhile, over the town of Sainte-Mare-Eglise, the first town liberated
on D-Day, twenty eight year old Lt. Robert Mason Mathias
of the 508th Parachute Regiment, US 82nd Airborne Division, was preparing to jump
from his C-47 Dakota, when he was wounded by a shell burst. In spite of the wounds
in his chest he commanded his men to 'Follow me' and hurled himself from the aircraft.
Some time later, his men found his dead body, still strapped in his chute. Lt. Mathias
was the first American soldier killed on D-day. Also at
Sainte Mare-Eglise, Private John Steele found himself hanging
from his parachute from the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
After some hours he was rescued by one of the German defenders, a Rudolf May.

US CHUTE'S DEADLY DELAY

The 957 men of the US 82nd Airborne Division suffered a 16% casualty rate on
landing among the Normandy hedgerows. Twenty five men were killed, fourteen missing
and 118 wounded. Everything depended on a quick dispersal after landing and to get
to the nearest cover. The delay caused by the difficulty of getting out of their
chute harness proved fatal to many.In later drops, the buckles
were dispensed with and the British quick-release mechanism was adopted.

AIR-POWER JOKE

The failure of the German Luftwaffe to appear over the D-day beaches caused the
Wehrmacht soldiers to quip "if a plane in the sky is silver, it's
American, if it's blue, it's British, if it's invisible, it's ours!"

THE TRAGEDY OF VERCORS

The Vercors Massif is a limestone plateau surrounded
by many cliffs, ridges and valleys, its highest point being the 2,346 metre high
Grand Veymont. Situated not far from Grenoble in central France it became the scene
of the greatest and most tragic battles involving thousands of men of the French
resistance. Just after D-day these men had rallied to Vercors to assist the Allies
by slowing down the German forces on their way to Normandy. Completely surrounded
by the enemy (estimated at 10,000 under the command of General Karl Pflaum) these
brave resistance fighters hoisted high the French Tricolour, to be clearly seen
from the German headquarters at Grenoble, and proclaimed the plateau the
Free Republic of Vercors - the first democratic area of France since the
start of the German occupation in 1940. On July 22/23, 1944, about twenty enemy
gliders landed and out poured some 500 SS soldiers who began shooting everyone in
sight and raping all females regardless of age. Houses were set on fire with whole
families inside. Ground troops then attacked the town of St Nizer and by nightfall
some ninety-three houses were smouldering ruins. The air support promised from Algiers
never arrived. In the town about forty wounded maquisards were captured, all proudly
wearing an armband with the letters FFI (Forces Francaises de Interieur) then tortured
and shot. The men of Vercors fought heroically to the bitter end when on August
18 the last of the German troops pulled out of Vercors when the Allied landings
began in the south of France. Some 840 people had been killed on Vercors (639 FFI
and 201 civilians) since the first day of the German assault. On August 13, the
first American tanks rumbled through the crowded streets of Grenoble.
(The whole sad epic of Vercors is detailed in the book 'Tears of
Glory' by Michael Pearson.)

G.I. RAPIST HANGED

The first Allied soldier to be hanged after D-Day was Private
Clarence Whitfield, a black US soldier of the 494th Port Battalion. He was
convicted of the brutal rape of Aniela Skrzyniarz, a Polish farm girl working on
a farm at Vierville Sur Mer, just behind Omaha Beach, on
June 14, 1944. On August 14, Private Whitfield was hanged on a
gallows that was erected in the garden of the Chateau at Canisy, five kilometres
south of Saint Lo.

GRIM REPLY

General Fritz Bayerlein, commander of the Panzer Lehr Division, when ordered
by Field Marshal Von Kluge to hold the line at all costs, replied angrily
"out in front every one is holding out. Every one. My grenadiers
and my engineers and my tank crews, they are all holding their ground. Not a single
man is leaving his post. They are lying silent in their foxholes, for they are all
DEAD."

SURRENDER OF US TROOPS

During the Ardennes Offensive (aka The Battle of the
Bulge) troops of the US 106th Infantry Regiment suffered 564 killed and 1,246 wounded
before being taken prisoner. Around 7,000 men fighting on the pine covered hills
of the Schnee Eifel were forced to surrender. This was the biggest
surrender of American troops since the American civil war. The Battle of the Bulge
delayed the Allied offensive by six weeks.

JAPANESE MASS SUICIDE

On July 8, 1944, American troops were stunned by the discovery of some
8,000 Japanese troops and civilians who had committed mass suicide
in the final battle during the invasion of the island of Saipan
in the Pacific. Pushed back into Marpi Point at the northern tip of the island,
they were told by the Japanese commander, Lt. General Saito, that they would be
"tortured and killed by the Americans." Hundreds of women
then threw their children over the cliffs before jumping themselves. Thousands of
bodies were found floating in the pounding surf, and thousands more piled up on
the jagged rocks. Lt. General Saito committed ritual suicide (hara-kiri) his body
was then burned by his aides. His ashes, when found by the Americans,
were given a military funeral.

CASUALTIES IN ITALY

Allied losses in Italy amounted to 31,886 killed, 19,471 of them were Americans.
US losses for Italy and Sicily (1,233) combined were 36,169 dead. British and Commonwealth
casualties in the 39 day Sicilian campaign were 2,721 men killed.

FREE FROM COMMUNISM

As Hitler's armies advanced on Stalingrad they overran the Cossack regions of
the Don, Terek and Kuban. Hundreds of thousands of Russians willingly enrolled in
the German army to form a Cossack Army under the Russian General Krasnoff. Hitler
promised that they would be settled in "lands and everything necessary
for their livelihood in Western Europe". Their new homeland was to be in
north-east Italy in the valley of Carnia on the plain of Undine where they would
live their national life free from the confines of Bolshevism.

Italian families in the area were ejected from their homes which were then used
to house the Cossack soldiers and their families who had arrived in fifty trains
during July and August 1944. To the Cossacks this was paradise far removed from
their dreary life in the Ukraine. Hitler had named this new independent state 'Kosakenland'.
Many atrocities were committed by these Russians against the Italian civilians,
particularly the women, causing one Archbishop to write to Mussolini
"It is terrible to think that Friuli will be governed by these
illiterate savages". Discipline was soon restored when General Krasnoff himself
arrived. Cossack officers were under no delusions, they knew they were there to
shed blood for the Nazi cause. With the Allied armies approaching from the south
and Tito's IX Yugoslav Corps approaching from the east, the 'Free
Republic of Carnia' soon disintegrated and the Cossacks and their followers
forced to trundle north towards Austria and internment by the British.

USAF ACCIDENTAL DEATHS DISCLOSURE

On October 4, 1944, the US War Department discloses that a total of 11,000 men
of the US Air Force have been killed in 5,600 fatal air accidents since the attack
on Pearl Harbor.

V WEAPONS HIT LONDON

The V1 weapons were Argus As 014 pulse-jet
powered, not rocket. The first attack on Britain started on the night of 13 / 14
June, 1944, and ended on March 29, 1945. A total of 10,500 missiles were launched
and 3,957 were destroyed by defences, 3,531 reached England and 2,353 fell on
London. The death toll from these missiles was 6,184 killed
and 17,981 persons were seriously injured. The last of the V1s (Doodlebug) was destroyed
over Sittingbourne in Kent on March 27, 1945.

The V2 rocket attack saw a total of 1,115 rockets arrive
over England of which 517 fell on London, killing 2,754 people, 6,523 were injured.
The V2 rocket attack lasted seven months starting on September 8, 1944, the first
destroyed the home of Mr and Mrs Clarke at No 1, Staveley Road, London. On November
25th, 164 people were killed when another V2 rocket hit the Woolworth's store in
South London. The last V2 rocket to fall on England fell at 4.45pm on March 29,
1945, on the town of Orpington in Kent. Hitler had planned to destroy the whole
of Britain with V-weapons. In charge of the entire missile project was
Dr Hans Kammler, later promoted to SS Major General.
On September 8, 1944, at 6.48 pm, the first of Kammler's V2s exploded on London.
In the closing days of the war, a search for Dr Kammler was launched but he was
never found. To this day, he remains perhaps, the only German general
to have disappeared without trace.

LONDON AUXILIARY AMBULANCE SERVICE.

During the bombing of London in 1940-41 and the later attacks by V1s and V2s
in 1944-45, the men and women of the LAAS, another neglected
branch of war-time services, worked 12 hour shifts for a wage of around £2 per week.
Driving an ambulance through London's blacked-out streets with bombs falling all
around called for courage of the highest order. To recover the dead and dying, some
with appalling injuries, and transporting them to hospitals or First-Aid Stations
was no mean feat. Dismembered bodies, bundled into body bags, were taken to the
largest refrigeration system in London, the Billingsgate Fish Market, there to await
some form of identification. Land mines, dropped by parachutes, were another hazard.
One ambulance unit, when entering the Thermionic Club, a gentleman's club in Portland
Place, just after a mine exploded, found several headless gentlemen still sitting
in their armchairs, their heads having been blown off by the blast. There were 139
Auxiliary Stations in and around London employing some 1,200 full-time and 883 part-time
personnel, the majority being female. Others were men too old or sick for military
service and also quite a few conscientious objectors. For their courage and devotion
to duty, three members of the LAAS were awarded the George Cross and nine were awarded
the British Empire Medal.

V WEAPONS HIT ANTWERP

The city to suffer most from Hitler's vengeance weapons (the V1s and V2s) was
the Belgian port of Antwerp. After four years of German occupation the city was
now to suffer the agonies that London had endured, only this time much worse. The
first V2 rocket struck the city at 9.45am on Friday. October 13, 1944, killing 32
people. On October 28, a V1 killed 71 persons and destroyed forty homes. On November
27, a V2 impacted on Teniers Square as an Allied military convoy was passing through.
The explosion killed 157 persons including 29 Allied soldiers.

The worst disaster of all was on December 12, 1944, when a V2
rocket hit the REX CINEMA in Antwerp killing 492 people,
mostly British troops. Another 500 were injured. Over a period of 175 days and nights
a total of 106 V1s and 107 V2s hit the city killing 3,752 civilians and 731 Allied
soldiers. Some 3,613 properties were destroyed.

COINCIDENCE

On July 20, 1944, a flight of Heinkel 177s, commanded by Obstlt. Horst von Riesen,
was circling the Masury Lakes near Hitler's HQ in East Prussia, when the engine
of one plane caught fire. An order to jettison the bomb load was given. By pure
coincidence the bombs exploded at exactly the same time
as Stauffenberg's bomb went off in the Führer's conference room. On landing, Von
Riesen was arrested and faced a court martial but was released some hours later
when the bomb plot was confirmed.

GAY GORDON'S BATTALION LOSSES

During the eleven month campaign, from Normandy to the Baltic, Scotland's 51st
Highland Division's battalion the Gay Gordon's had suffered
986 casualties among its ranks. On top of this, seventy five officers had been killed
or wounded. This amounts to almost a complete turn round of the famous battalion.

UPRISING IN WARSAW

A rebellion against the Nazi occupiers of Poland's capital city started on August
1, 1944. The Polish underground army (AK, Home Army) started the operation to liberate
the city from the invaders and enable them to act as hosts to the approaching Red
Amy. The operation which was to last an incredible 63 days and cost the AK around
6,000 lives with some 50,000 wounded. The Red Army stopped its offensive just miles
outside the city just to let the Poles and Germans fight it out amongst themselves
hoping no doubt that the Germans would annihilate the anti-communist Polish Home
Army, thus saving the lives of many Russian soldiers. The AK, under the direction
of Polish General 'Bor', Komorowski was forced to capitulate on October 2.
He was interened in Colditz Castle as a POW .

COWRA BREAKOUT(August 5, 1944)

The greatest prison break in history took
place from the Prisoner of War camp No. 12 at Cowra situated
in the Lachlan Valley in New South Wales, Australia. The compound contained Japanese
and Italian P.O.W.s. On the night of 4/5th August, 1,104 Japanese prisoners broke
out of Compound B believing that dying while attempting to escape would wipe out
the shame of capture. In the wholesale indiscriminate shooting that took place during
the breakout, 231 Japanese prisoners were killed and 107 wounded. Only four Australian
camp guards were killed and four wounded. Eighteen of the twenty-odd huts were set
on fire in which 20 prisoners had already committed suicide. In all, 334 Japanese
escaped from the camp and in the hunt that followed, 25 died by shooting and suicide.
All those recaptured were punished with up to twenty-eight days solitary in the
Old Melbourne Gaol.

Fearing reprisals against Australian P.O.W.s in Japanese prison camps, the whole
incident was kept top secret for over six years. The Japanese Cemetery at Cowra
contains the graves of 522 Japanese nationals who died in Australia during World
War II. A similar incident happened at the Japanese P.O.W. camp at Featherstone,
New Zealand, when during a stand off between prisoners and guards, the prisoners
rushed the guards, who opened fire with machine guns killing 48 Japanese and wounding
74 more.

The Cowra Breakout was alarming news to wartime Australians.

DUKLA PASS BATTLE(September 8/October
25, 1944)

The Dukla Pass cuts through the Carpathian Mountains on the border of Slovakia
and Poland. Five days after the Slovak National Uprising began (a rebellion against
the German occupation of their country) Soviet troops attacked the area around the
Polish town of Dukla in an effort to break through and link up with the 5,000 members
of the Slovak insurgents and together overthrow the pro-German government and expel
the Nazi troops from the territory. The 50 day battle, in terms of casualties, became
the bloodiest ever fought on Slovakian soil. It is also perhaps the least known
of all battles fought in Europe during World War II. The Soviet 38th Army had 10,491
men killed and 64,743 wounded. In the 1st Guards Army another 10,500 men were killed
and 24,200 wounded. Casualties among Slovak soldiers were 1,100 killed and 4,330
wounded. On the German side an estimated 52,000 men were killed, wounded or missing.
Clearing the area of mines continued up 1960 during which 78 Army engineers and
289 civilians lost their lives. Soviet troops took a total of 31,360 prisoners.
Today the battle area, covering 20 square kilometres, is an open-air battlefield
museum in which dozens of T-34 tanks and various artillery pieces are strewn all
over the area. A look-out tower has been built giving visitors a panoramic view
of the whole battlefield.

OPERATION ‘ASTONIA’(September 10-12,
1944)

Code name for the attack and capture of the French port of Le
Havre. The ports of Dieppe and Ostend had been captured by the Canadian First
Army but Le Havre was assigned to the British 1 Corps under Canadian command. Prior
to the actual attack the town was subjected to a massive co-ordinated bombardment
by British naval guns and RAF bombers leaving 80 per cent of the town in ruins.
The attack on Le Havre took the lives of 5,126 civilians including 2,053 civilians
killed during the bombardment. This in spite of a request by the German commander,
Oberst Eberhard Wildermuth, to be given a two-day armistice to evacuate the residents
from the besieged city. He had earlier rejected the British demand of unconditional
surrender. The attack on Le Havre lasted 48 hours in which 11,302 German soldiers
were captured and around 600 killed. British losses were less than 500. After VE-Day
an estimated 3,675,000 American troops had passed through the port on their way
home.

TUNNEL TRAGEDY

A freight train carrying hundreds of civilians, who had jumped on board because
no other transport was available, stalled in a tunnel near Salerno,
Italy, on December18, 1944. Toxic fumes from the engine filled the tunnel and within
a short time a total of 426 people died from carbon monoxide poisoning.

AIR CRASH

A US 8th Army Air Force B-24 Liberator bomber crashes into the Holy Trinity School
in Lytham Road in Freckelton, Lancashire, on August 23,
1944, killing 38 children. Twenty-three others, including teachers, civilians and
the three man bomber crew, also died. This was the worst aircraft crash in Britain
during the war. The bomber, from the American Base Air Depot No. 2 at nearby Warton,
was on a test flight when the pilot received a radio signal to land immediately
as an electrical storm was heading their way. The B-24 never made it back to base
but at 10.30 am crashed in heavy rain into the village school. The village centre
was turned into a sea of flames as nearly 3,000 gallons of aviation fuel ignited.

COPY CAT

In 1944, three of the most advanced strategic bombers to date, the
B29 Superfortress, made a forced landing on Soviet territory
after a raid on Japan. Stalin ordered that they be impounded. Two were dismantled
completely and rebuilt in every last detail. The Soviet version
made its first appearance after the war as the Tupolev TU-4.

HORSES

Horses have played a significant role in warfare since the 19th century BC when
they were used in Chariot warfare. The last major use of these animals was in Poland
when the Polish cavalry used them in a last-ditch attempt to defend their country
against enemy tanks. The total number of horses captured by the Allies in France,
Belgium and Holland amounted to 10,794. These animals were all disposed of to farmers,
except those used for work at the Antwerp docks. In the German army a key element
in the field of transport was horses. Non-motorized infantry divisions were allotted
4,800 horses. When the war began the German ground forces had well over half a million
of these animals and at war's end a total of 2,700,000 horses had served in the
war. This was twice the number used by Germany in the Great War of 1914-1918.

JEEP

Nearly 649,000 of these vehicles were produced during WWII, 631,873 were delivered
to the US Army and Air Force. Mostly used to support the Allied armed forces in
war. In 1939 the US Military asked 135 companies to submit designs for an all-purpose
vehicle. Only three companies responded to the request, Willys, Ford and Bantam.
Willys-Overland was granted the manufacturing contract. The word 'Jeep' comes from
the code letters GP the G meaning Government and the P a code letter meaning '80
inch wheelbase reconnaissance car' the name given to the Ford prototype and adopted
by Willys as their trade mark. When slurred together the letters GP sounds like
'Jeep'. Peak production at the Willys-Overland plant in Toledo,
Ohio, was one Jeep every 80 seconds.

VOLKSWAGEN

The 'Peoples Car' designed by Dr. Ferdinand Porsche in 1934 and promised to German
workers through the 'Strength Through Joy' (Kdf) scheme. Known originally as the
Kdf Wagen, subscriptions amounted to around 280 million
German Reichmarks from 336,668 subscribers who were encouraged to save five marks
weekly. Not one subscriber received the car. In 1944, 650
Jewish women were transferred from Auschwitz to work at the Volkswagen plant to
manufacture bazookas and mines. To house these workers a satellite camp was established
at Neuengamme. In 1945. the factory was captured by the US 102nd Infantry
Division and as the site lay within the British zone of occupation, the British
took over the badly bombed factory, fifty-eight percent of which lay in ruins. A
Military Government team, led by Major Ivan Hirst of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical
Engineers, got production going and produced the first post-war Beetle Volkswagen
car in early 1946. In March of that year the 1,000th Volkswagen rolled off the production
line and by the end of the year a total of 9,871 were built. It soon became one
of the world's most popular cars. In the museum at the Volkswagen Works at Wolfsburg,
near Hannover, you can see the original Prototype No 3 Kdf Wagen with a astonishing
400,000 kilometres on the clock. In 1970, the 14 millionth 'Beetle' was presented
to the United Kingdom.

SHELL SHOCK

The US Army suffered a total of 929,307 cases of 'Battle Fatigue'
during the war. In June alone, in Normandy, an alarming 10,000 men were treated
for some form of battle fatigue. Between June and November, 1944, this amounted
to a staggering 26% of all US casualties.

COURT MARTIAL

During the battle for Normandy, four British officers
and 7,018 other ranks were court martialled for desertion. Fifty-nine officers and
3,628 other ranks were court martialled for other offences.

THE LOST DIVISION

This was the name given to the American soldiers who had deserted in France and
in Germany at the end of 1945. They numbered around 19,000, many living on farms
and working as labourers, as black market racketeers, or in safe hiding places in
their new found girl friends' houses. By 1948, about 9,000 had been found. In 1947,
the British Government announced an offer of leniency for British deserters and
837 gave themselves up.

NITRO BLAST

During the Allied assault on the Scheldt Estuary on (October
20, 1944) (Operation Switchback), the British 248 Armoured
Assault Squadron of the Royal Engineers took up position in a field near the village
of Ijzendijke. No. 3 troop was assigned the task of operating
a mine-clearing device known as a Condor, a 300 foot length of canvas hose launched
empty across a minefield and then pumped full of liquid nitro-glycerine which was
then detonated, clearing a wide path through the minefield. While unloading the
nitro-glycerine from three Canadian lorries, a tremendous explosion rocked the area
sending shock waves that flattened everything in its path. Trees, farm buildings
and military vehicles were set on fire or completely wrecked by the blast. The three
lorries carrying the glycerine simply disappeared leaving three large craters on
the site. This accidental explosion, the largest in North-west Europe during WWII,
took the lives of 26 British and 15 Canadian soldiers and wounding 43 others. Fifty-three
years later, in 1997, a memorial was unveiled on the site commemorating the victims.
The ceremony was attended by over a hundred British and Canadian veterans.

JAPAN'S NEW IMPERIAL HEADQUARTERS.

In the mountainous region of Nagano on the island of HONSHU,
construction began on 11th November, 1944, to build Japan's new Imperial
Headquarters and accommodation for Japan's 124th ruler, Emperor Hirohito and his
wife. From here, Japan's last stand in WW11 would be directed. About 120
families were evacuated from the area before work began. To build this vast
complex of underground bunkers and tunnels some 7,000 to 10,000 Korean
workers were forcibly brought to Honshu as slave labourers. These workers toiled
under gruesome conditions. Tunnels were bored that stretched for kilometres
under the mountain peaks of Mount Maizuru, Mount Zozan and Mount Minakami
at 95 metres below ground. At Maizuru there were 20 main tunnels parallel to
each other and measured 4 metres wide and 2.7 metres high with a total length of
6 kilometres. It is estimated that around 1,500 of these slave workers perished
during construction. At the end of hostilities on August 11, 1945, all work
ceased leaving the complex 75% completed. After the war, what was meant to
be Hirohito's palace was converted to an orphanage. Today some of these tunnels are now open to visitors.
It was through General McArthur's benevolence that Hirohito was never brought to
trial for war crimes. Instead he was asked to acknowledge in public that
he was indeed a mortal being and not divine being. This he did on August 15,
1945, when the Japanese people heard his voice for the very first time. He then
proceeded on a tour of Japan's devastated cities. He died on January 7, 1989,
after a 62 year reign. He was 88 years old.

In 1990, Japan
published a list of 90,804 Korean slave workers who were forcibly brought
to Japan during WW11.

EXPLOSION (November 27, 1944)

The large underground gypsum mines at RAF Station, Fauld
in Staffordshire, was being used as storage for three and a half thousand tons of
high explosive bombs. Within were 22 miles of railway track. At 11.10am on the morning
of November 27, the bombs exploded en masse claiming 70 lives, including 7 Italian
P.O.W.s who were brought in to help, and injuring another 22. It left a crater 80
feet deep and covered an area of twelve acres on which lay 200 dead cattle. An official
explanation has never been issued as to the cause of this, the greatest explosion
ever in the United Kingdom. A memorial, erected in 1990 lists the names of all seventy
dead, and states that eighteen of the bodies were never recovered.

GLEN MILLER DISAPPEARS WITHOUT A TRACE

On December 15, 1944, an American Dodge staff car,
driven by Staff Sergeant Edward McCulloch of Oceanside, California, entered the
small grass airfield at RAF Twinwood Farm near London and deposited his two passengers
near a waiting plane piloted by a 25-mission pilot, Flight Officer Johnny Morgan.
His passengers were a Lieutenant Colonel Norman Baessell (General Goodrich's Executive
Officer) 2nd Lieutenant Don Haynes, the band's executive officer (there only to
see the plane off) and the American band leader, Glenn Miller.
At 13.55 PM, the small UC-64A single engined Norseman plane with its three occupants
took off on a flight to Paris. Nothing was ever heard of the plane
again. In Paris, members of the band waited in their Hotel des Olympiades
for news, only to be told that Glen Miller was missing. (On Christmas
Eve the band was greeted with wild enthusiasm as it played its first concert without
their leader.)

On the same day, December 15, a force of 138 RAF Lancaster bombers was returning
from an aborted raid on Siege (east of Cologne). Carrying
a full bomb load, the Lancaster was a difficult plane to land, and in such circumstances
all bombers had to jettison their load over the Channel in an area designated as
the 'Southern Jettison Area'. While jettisoning their bomb
loads, the crew of a Lancaster from 149 Squadron saw a small plane crash into the
sea below them. Forty-two years later, when the Lancaster crew were traced and contacted
in New Zealand, they swore that the plane they had seen was a Norseman. The mystery
remains to this day. Did the Norseman stray off course into the prohibited area
only to be downed by bombs falling from the Lancaster bombers above?
The chances of finding the small plane on the bed of the Channel are a million to
one against.

Glenn Miller gave his last concert at the Queensbury All Services Club in Soho,
London, on December 12, 1944. Later, in 1945, one of the venues for a band concert,
without their leader, was at Nuremberg Stadium. Performed in front of thousands
of cheering GIs on the same field where many Hitler Youth ceremonies took place.
Today, the control tower at Twinwood Farm has been completely refurbished and dedicated
to Major Glen Miller and the American Band of the AEF. For full details of the Glen
Miller Band during their six months stay in Britain, see Chris Way's book
"Glen Miller in Britain Then and Now."Chris
Way died n July 2013 and his ashes scattered by John Miller, Glen's nephew, over
the grass in front of the restored tower at Twinwood Farm from where Glen Miller
departed on his last flight.

THE FAMOUS LANCASTER BOMBER. First flown on January 9, 1941. As the Lancaster
was vulnerable to attacks from below, some later versions were equipped with
a mid-under .5 machine gun mounted over a hole in the underside of the
fuselage, the gunner sitting on a small wooden seat. Several 622 squadron
Lancaster's
were equipped in this manner.

WAR DIARY

General Eisenhower's talents did not greatly impress the British General Montgomery.
At the end of Montgomery's war diary, a special note, written by the famous general,
stated "And so the campaign in Northwest Europe is finished. I
am glad; it has been a tough business ... the Supreme Commander had no firm ideas
as to how to conduct the war and was 'blown about by the wind' all over the place
... the staff at SHAEF were completely out of their depth all the time. The point
to understand is if we had run the show properly the war could have been finished
by Christmas, 1944. The blame for this must rest with the Americans. To balance
this it is merely necessary to say one thing, i.e. if the Americans had not come
along and lent a hand , we would never have won the war at all."

ROYAL AIR FORCE CASUALTIES

During the first six months of 1944, out of each 1,000 bomber crews who had flown
missions during that period, 712 were reported killed or missing and 175 were wounded
... an 89 percent casualty rate.

BRITISH AIR RAID CASUALTIES IN 1944

In the first four months 1,493 persons were killed and 2,871 injured in air raids.
In April, for the first time in four years, there were no casualties reported. In
June, Hitler's V1 flying bombs killed 1,935 persons and wounded 5,906. In July the
V2 rockets killed 2,441 and injured 7,107. In the next five months, casualties amounted
to 1,548 deaths and 6,055 wounded. (There were 60,595 British civilian deaths from
air raids and rocket attacks during the war, this included 25,399 women and children.
Some 86,182 were seriously wounded.

On January 1, 1945, the German Luftwaffe launched a surprise
attack on thirteen British and American held airfields in Belgium and northern France.
Around 800 aircraft, mostly Focke Wulf Fw190s and Messerschmitt Bf109s took part
in this low level attack. A total of 224 Allied aircraft were destroyed, the RAF
lost 144 planes, with a further 84 damaged beyond repair. Pilot losses were minimal.
On the way there and back, around one hundred Luftwaffe planes were shot down by
their own anti-aircraft ground batteries whose officers were not warned of the planned
assault.

RELUCTANT DRAFTEES

On January 3, 1945, the first Canadian draftees sailed
for Europe from Halifax. Prior to departure, 7,800 had gone absent without leave.
At sailing time 6,300 were still absent. Many of the draftees, as they boarded the
ship, dropped their rifles from the gangplank into the water as a form of protest
to going into a combat zone in Europe. Most of the protesters were French Canadians.
Eventually, 13,000 of these draftees did go to Europe but only
2,463 managed to reach their respective units before the war ended. Of these, sixty-nine
were killed in battle. Total military casualties were 39,319 dead.

ICE CREAM BARGE

Perhaps the war's most unusual ship was commissioned in 1945 at a cost of around
one million dollars. It was the US Navy's 'Ice Cream Barge' the
world's first floating ice cream parlour. Its sole responsibility was to
produce ice cream for US sailors in the Pacific region. The barge crew pumped out
around 1,500 gallons every hour! The concrete hulled vessel had no engine of its
own but was towed around by tugs and other ships. A second barge, also in the ice
cream business, and under the command of a Major Charles Zeigler, was anchored off
Naha, Okinawa.

SPECIAL TRAIN (Sonderzug)

Hitler's private train was pulled by two locomotives and including two armoured
railroad cars. The train was originally named 'Amerika' and after the United States
entered the war the name was changed to 'Brandenburg' and was last used by Hitler
on January 15, 1945, when he left the Führer Headquarters
at Adlerhorst at 6pm and arrived back in Berlin the next day. This train was used
by Hitler during the attack on Poland and during the war a total of thirteen H/Qs
were built for Hitler including the underground bunker at the Reich
Chancellery in Berlin. The balcony was added in 1937 by Albert Speer who
had just been created Inspector General of Buildings in Berlin.

The Chancellery in 1939.

The Chancellery, with balcony, in 1945.

BATTLE CASUALTIES

The 'Battle of the Bulge'(December
16, 1944, to January 27, 1945) cost the Americans 8,497 killed and 46,170
wounded. A total of 20,905 men were reported missing, most of them prisoners of
war. German casualties amounted to 12,652 killed. This final offensive by Germany
delayed the Allied advance by six weeks. By January 28, the line was restored to
its original German starting point as at December 16. The majority of the American
dead , including those from the Battle of the Huertgen Forrest,
lie buried in the magnificently kept US Military Cemetery at Hamm, near Luxembourg.
It contains 5,076 graves plus the names of 371 missing. The grave of General George
S. Patton is also located here, the inscription on his Italian marble cross reading
"George S. Patton Jnr ... General Third Army ... California ...
Dec 21, 1945."

General Patton's car after the crash. This 1939 French assembled Cadillac is
on display at the Patton Museum of Cavalry and Armour at Fort Knox, Kentucky.

LIBERATION

On January 26, 1945, Red Army troops liberated the Auschwitz
concentration camp in Poland. Among the 2,819 prisoners found alive (including 180
children) were 754 Poles, 542 Hungarians, 346 French, 315 Czechs, 180 Russians,
159 Dutch, 143 Yugoslavians, 76 Greeks, 52 Rumanians, and 41 Belgians. Of these,
223 were suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis. As well as the living, 536 dead
corpses were found in the grounds of the camp. Most had died from hunger and pure
physical exhaustion. For the survivors in the camp a new source of terror emerged
as the Soviet troops set about raping the female prisoners including many Soviet
women prisoners. Eighty-four days after the liberation the Red Army was in Berlin.
Around 50 British Jews died in Auschwitz, most had emigrated to France, Belgium
or Holland before the war.

It is not generally known but in Auschwitz a brothel was established
to give incentives to those hard working slave prisoners. Block 24 was emptied and
the first floor turned into a brothel. Girls were picked from the non-Jewish prisoners
and forced to work in the brothel. Visits were only allowed if the prisoner had
a special voucher which was issued only to those prisoners who were well and fit
enough to work. No male Jews were given these vouchers.

FRENCH ‘TRAITORS’
BRUTALLY PUNISHED

Some 8,000 Frenchmen donned the
Wehrmacht uniform and formed the Charlemagne Division of
the Waffen SS. They fought so well on the Eastern Front that many were awarded the
Iron Cross for their bravery and three were awarded the
Knights Cross. After the war, when the survivors of the Charlemagne Division returned
to their homeland, they were treated in a most brutal and inhumane fashion when
the French Resistance extracted their revenge on all collaborators. During the four
years after the war, a total of 118,000 men and women were prosecuted for collaboration
with the Germans. Fifty thousand were brought to trial but only 791 were executed.
Women collaborators, especially those who had formed romantic attachments to German
soldiers were also singled out for punishment. Many suffered the indignation of
having their hair cut off and marched through the city streets to display their
baldness while carrying their babies, many fathered by enemy soldiers.
(See title picture at the top of the page, one of the 26,000 known
cases of French women being punished for having an affair with German soldiers.)
In Belgium, volunteers from the Belgian Wallonie SS Regiment
were locked up for weeks behind bars in the Brussels zoo. There, they were jeered
at and spat upon by members of the public.

THE EDDIE SLOVIK EXECUTION

At 10.05am on January 31, 1945, Private Eddie D. Slovik,
36896415, of Company G, 109th Infantry Regiment, US 28th Infantry Division, was
executed by a twelve man firing squad from his own regiment. The execution took
place in the garden of a villa at No 86, Rue de General Dourgeois in the town of
St. Marie-Aux-Mines near Colmar in eastern France. Slovik,
the son of poor Polish immigrants, was the only American since the Civil War to
be shot for desertion. The order for the execution was signed by General Eisenhower.
Of the hundred thousand or so GI deserters from the US Army, 2,864 were tried by
general court-martial for desertion since the war began. Forty-nine were sentenced
to death but in only one case, that of Eddie Slovik, was the sentence carried out.
Colonel James E. Rudder of the 109th Infantry Regiment would later write to his
men "The person that is not willing to fight and die, if need be,
for his country has no right to life." The villa at No. 86 has since been
demolished and three residential apartment blocks have been built on the site. The
street name has also been changed. Eddie Slovik's widow died in Detroit on September
7, 1979 where she had been living under an assumed name. In 1987, the remains of
Eddie Slovik were returned to the USA and now lie buried next to his wife, Antoinette,
in the Woodmere Cemetery, Detroit, Michigan.

During World War I over 300 British and Commonwealth soldiers
were shot by firing squad for alleged cowardice and desertion. Completely ignored
was the fact that the majority of these soldiers were sick, traumatised and clearly
suffered from shell-shock.

MILITARY CRIMES

A total of 49 US soldiers were hanged for crimes that were committed on French
soil after the D-Day landings. In the whole European theatre of operations, 109
civilians were murdered by American soldiers. In Germany, 107 German nationals were
murdered. At the same time 214 US soldiers were also murdered by their own countrymen.

In France, there were 181 reported cases of rape by US Forces. In Germany there
were 552 reported cases of rape. Those sentenced to death for various crimes amounted
to 443 (245 white men and 198 coloured) Only 21 per cent of those sentences of death
were actually carried out. (Only one Canadian soldier was executed
in WWII, the charge being murder and black market dealings.)

SHEPTON MALLET PRISON

Britain's oldest jail was built in 1610 and used for executions up till 1926
when the last hanging took place on Tuesday, March 2. During World War II this prison
in Somerset was taken over by the American Armed Forces for the executions of convicted
US soldiers. An execution chamber was added to one of the prison's wings and a British
style gallows was installed as the normal method of US Army hanging was not permitted
in England. In all, 18 executions were carried out in the prison, 9 were for murder,
6 for rape and 3 for both crimes. Eleven of the condemned were Afro-Americans, three
were Latino and four were white soldiers. Seventeen were of the rank of private
and one corporal. Rape was not a capital offence under British law but was under
US Military law. Sixteen of the executions were carried out by hanging, the executioners
being Albert Pierrepoint and his nephew Tom Pierrepoint. Two executions for murder
were by firing squad, the first on May 30, 1944 and the second on November 28, 1944.
Shooting by firing squad was the usual sentence in the case of a soldier convicted
of a purely military offence, i.e. killing of an officer or fellow soldier.

Cell No. 10 in Shepton Mallet prison was used to store some
of Britain's national treasures including a copy of the Magna Carta, the Doomsday
Book and the logs of Nelson's Flagship, HMS Victory.

L.M.F. (Lacking In Moral Fibre)

Lack of Moral Courage is a subject that has been largely
ignored in military history records. This unique and horrendous label LMF was given
to RAF bomber crew members who displayed 'cowardice' during combat and were indefinitely
banished from his squadron and his flying badges taken away, a most degrading thing
for the victim who showed guts on previous missions. In the Royal Air Force some
4,000 cases were classified LMF (Later changed to 'Forfeiting The Co's Confidence')
and in late 1944 around 2,000 were incarcerated in the detention facility at Sheffield.
Sergeants were reduced to the lowest rank and put to work shovelling coal, peeling
potatoes and in some cases sent to work underground in the coal mines. An officer
was asked to resign or transferred to a desk job in administration. Many of these
LMF cases had already completed a dozen or more operational raids, some even were
decorated for bravery which makes any punishment unfair and unjust. No one was executed
for LMF, the ultimate punishment was dispensed with many years before. After the
heavy losses during the bombing of Leipzig and Nuremberg most air-crew were flying
in fear although few would admit it. Most LMF case reports have
somehow disappeared or have been destroyed and it is hoped that the stigma of LMF
has been erased from the files.

CAMP X

Established in December, 1941, on a 275 acre farm bordering
Lake Ontario in Canada, this Special Training School for secret agents saw
hundreds of agents trained for secret missions into occupied Europe and Asia. Training
was extremely rigorous and involved parachute jumping, hand-to-hand combat, radio
operation, secret writing and use of explosives. The camp ceased operations in 1944
but continued as a secret communications facility throughout the Cold War. In 1969,
Camp X was closed down and today all that remains is contained in a 17 acre memorial
site named 'Intrepid Park' in memory of Sir William Stephenson, head of the British
Intelligence Service (BSIS) and founder of Camp X.

JEWISH SUICIDES

Relatively few Jewish prisoners committed suicide while in the concentration
camps, but after liberation, many hundreds took their own lives. The guilt they
felt for being alive, while so many of their people died, was worse than the daily
threat of death and torture they faced in the camps. Many survivors gave up their
faith after the war and refused to believe their Rabbis who tried to explain that
the Holocaust was the 'Will of God' a necessary sacrifice to the establishment of
the state of Israel.

FLAG RAISING

The first US flag, the Stars and Strips, raised on Mount Suribachi
on Iwo Jima, was considered too small (54 by 28 inches) for such an important
victory. Another, much larger flag (96 by 56 inches) was procured from a beached
Tank Landing Ship, LST-779 and raised on the Mount on February
23, 1945, just as press photographer Joe Rosenthal
took his famous picture. The two flags were preserved by the marines and are now
displayed in the US Marine Corps Museum in Quantico, Virginia. The first flag raising
was photographed by combat photographer Louis R Lowrey but being a less dramatic
picture was never given the publicity of the Rosenthal photograph. In the bloodiest
fighting of the Pacific war, 4,554 Americans were killed including 170 Navy frogmen
who died attempting to clear beach defences on Iwo Jima. Japanese casualties included
around 21,900 dead. (On March 16 the island of Iwo Jima was declared
secure, only a small pocket of 200 Japanese were still active. The final suicidal
assault by the trapped Japanese troops ended in the deaths of 196 of them.)

Rosenthal's famous photograph. Three of the men pictured were killed before
the island was secured. (This photo is a re-enactment after the first flag,
a smaller one, was raised.)

OKINAWA

(April 1-June 21, 1945) The only invasion
of the Japanese homeland, 360 miles south of Japan. The 81 day battle for the island
in the Ryukyus caused losses totalling 107,500 among the Japanese garrison. The
US 10th Army casualties were 7,374 killed and around 4,600 wounded. This was the
highest losses suffered by the Americans in the Pacific War. For the first time
large numbers of enemy troops surrendered, a total of 7,400.The commanding general
of the Japanese forces, Lieutenant General Mitsuru Ushijima, committed suicide.
The commander of the Japanese naval base, Admiral Minoru Ota, also committed suicide.
In all, 234,183 persons were killed. This included Japanese and US soldiers, Korean
labourers and Okinawa residents. All their names can be seen today inscribed on
114 stone Memorials. Just before the invasion, US forces discovered around 350 Japanese
suicide boats in nearby Kerama Islands. All were positioned for attacks on Allied
ships in the expected invasion of Okinawa. The US Navy lost 4,907 men and 36 ships.
The ferocity of the Japanese defenders was a key consideration in the decision to
drop the atomic bomb on the Japanese homeland although conventional fire-bombing
had killed more civilians than the two atomic bombs. (It was here
on Ie Shima, near Okinawa, that American war correspondent Ernie Pyle, aged 44,
was shot dead by a sniper on April 18. His grave is in the Punchbowl Cemetery, Honolulu.
In the six days of fighting for the island, 4,706 Japanese troops were killed.)

OPERATION 'STARVATION'

The code name for the American attempt to starve the Japanese into submission
in early August, 1945. The US Navy and Air Force blockaded Japan's inner waters
and harbours by laying 12,135 mines the result of which around 670 ships of all
sizes were sunk or put out of commission. On August 6 the first atomic bomb was
dropped on Hiroshima and the second bomb dropped on Nagasaki on the 9th. Japan agreed
to surrender unconditionally on August 14. (The demand for unconditional
surrender was first laid down at the Casablanca conference in January, 1943)
The damage done by the bombs was greater than at first thought, according to US
Airforce generals who flew a low-level reconnaisssance tour over the target cities.
The aircraft assembly plant at Nagoya was completely destroyed, not a thing was
left. As to the Mitsubishi plant in the same area, all that was left was
some concrete and steel framework. By 1945, the tremendous Allied air superiority
was such that the collapse of Japan was only a matter of time and the Soviet Union's
entry into the war against Japan on August 9 and its invasion of Manchuria next
day, made it a certainty. Japanese factories, still in production were on the point
of closing due to the shortage of coal. There was really no real need for the atom
bombs. America's intention was to impress the Russians and so the bomb was dropped
on people rather than in the ocean. (Japanese casualties in all
theatres from 1937 to 1945 were 1,140,429 killed in action.)

V2 BOMBING MISSION FIASCO

On Saturday, March 3, 1945, fifty-six RAF B25 Mitchell
bombers appeared over the Hague in Holland. Their mission
was to bomb the V-2 rocket sites situated in the woods just outside the city. Inadvertently
the bombs started to fall on Bezuedenhout, a residential
suburb of the city and at least a mile from the V-2 sites. Over 3,000 houses were
destroyed and 511 of its citizens killed. In all, around 12,000 people were rendered
homeless. An inquiry by the RAF revealed that the tragedy was the
fault of the aircrew briefing officer who had read the horizontal and vertical co-ordinates
the wrong way round. The officer concerned was later court martialled and punished.

THE LARGEST BOMB

On March 29, 1945, the railway viaduct at
Bielefeld, Germany, was attacked by RAF Lancaster's of
617 Squadron, (The Dambusters). The bombers were specially
modified to carry the 'Grand Slam' - the monster 22,000lb (9,979kg) bomb designed
by Barnes Wallace. At almost 10 tons, the Lancaster could only
carry one bomb at a time. Piloted by Squadron Leader C. Calder, his Lancaster,
one of the 33 converted, dropped the bomb about thirty metres from the viaduct,
the resulting explosion caused powerful shock waves to radiate outwards destroying
two arches each 1,100 feet in length. The bomb was the largest ever used in war,
it could penetrate seven meters (23 feet) of reinforced concrete as it did on the
U-boat pens near Bremen. The Grand Slam measured 7.7 meters in length and contained
4,144 kg of explosive. A total of 41 of these bombs were dropped during the war.
In all, 7,374 Lancaster bombers were built during the war. (The
last RAF crews to lose their lives in the war were the crews of two Halifax bombers
which collided in mid-air during a raid on Kiel on May 2,
1945. All thirteen crew members were killed.)

SLAVE LABOUR?

Just over 18,400 Italian P.O.W.s were brought to Australia between 1943 and 1945.
Due to a labour shortage in rural areas, around 13,000 were assigned to work on
farms throughout the country. Farm owners were obliged to pay £1 sterling per week
to the War Office for each prisoner assigned to them. The P.O.W.s themselves received
one shilling and three pence per week for their work. Food and lodging was free.
Labour Unions and the Returned Services League (RSL) bitterly opposed this arrangement,
seeing the use of prisoners as a form of slave labour. The RSL complained that Italian
prisoners on the farms were being treated as members of the family while Australian
soldiers were dying in battle in a war that Italy helped create.

BERGEN-BELSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP

On April 15, 1945, the Belsen concentration
camp, near the village of Bergen, north of Hannover, was liberated by British
troops. Scattered around the grounds were around 10,000 decaying
corpses which the troops had to bury in mass graves using bulldozers. Some
of the survivors who had been transferred to Belsen from Auschwitz, stated that
living conditions here were far superior to those in Auschwitz. But this was soon
to change as trains bringing thousands of inmates from camps in the east began to
arrive in Belsen. Conditions became catastrophic during the final months of the
war as transports bringing food supplies to the camp were increasingly being destroyed
on the roads and railways by Allied bombers. Gross overcrowding, inadequate supplies
of food, water and medicines and an uncontrollable outbreak of typhus caused the
deaths of about 37,000 inmates up to the day of liberation.

In the few weeks after the British takeover, another 13,994 died in spite of
all the care taken to preserve life. Some 2,000 of these died after eating the rich
food given to them by the British soldiers. On May 2, some 95 medical students from
London's teaching hospitals were flown to Belsen to help treat the sick prisoners.
But in striking contrast to the distorted press coverage at the time, the Belsen
Concentration Camp was not an extermination facility. There was no deliberate intention
by the Germans to starve the prisoners to death at Belsen (officially designated
as a convalescence camp). No gas chambers were discovered and the crematorium consisted
of only one furnace in which to cremate the dead. The Camp's Commandant, Josef Kramer,
along with his chief physician, Dr Fritz Cline, quarantined the camp and did everything
in their power to prevent the catastrophe, even appealing to higher authority for
more transport to fetch vegetables and other foodstuffs from the countryside. In
spite of their efforts both Kramer and Cline were executed after being found guilty
at the Belsen War Crimes Trial. A total of 86 staff members,
including 28 SS women guards were captured. By June 17, twenty had died, some by
suicide and others from the rigours of digging the long trench graves to bury
the dead bodies
which the British forced them to do. These bodies were later interned in the
huge mass graves that can be seen today. In the camp's cemetery lie the bodies
of over 19,500 Soviet prisoners of war. By the end of the month the whole camp had
to be burned down, even the timber building housing the crematorium.

The Crematory Oven At Belsen (now removed)

One of the Mass Graves (2,500 Dead) at Belsen today.

The burning of Belsen in 1945.

Under Guard. Joseph Kramer and Irma Grese at Celle Prison.

FLOSSENBÜRG CONCENTRATION CAMP

Situated in an isolated area close to the Czech border in north-eastern Bavaria,
near the ruins of Schlossberg Castle, the site was chosen because of its close proximity
to granite stone quarries where prisoners could be used as cheap slave labour. Established
in May, 1938, it has often been referred to as the 'forgotten camp' having received
less publicity as other Nazi camps. The twenty huts for the prisoners were built
to accommodate 300 persons but by 1944 around 1,000 persons were crammed into each
hut. This caused serious health problems. Tuberculosis and Typhoid ran rampant in
1944 and resulted in the deaths of around 50 prisoners each day. An estimated 300
prisoners, too sick to work, were killed by lethal injection carried out by the
camp doctors. Prisoners were forced to work in winter in temperatures of 25 degrees
below zero. Punishment was severe, prisoners doused in water and forced to stand
until they froze.

In 1943 the camp expanded into armaments production, producing the Messerschmitt
109 fighter plane. It was here in the bunker courtyard that Hitler took his revenge
for the 20th July assassination attempt. Seven of the co-conspirators
were hanged including Admiral Wilhelm Canaris,
Hitler's Chief of Intelligence in the Abwehr.General Hans Oster the former Chief
of Staff to Canaris and anti-Nazi theologian Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
Canaris was found guilty of high treason by SS Judge Thorbeck and next day, April
9th, 1945, was taken from his cell and marched, naked, down a number of steps into
a small secluded area where stood the six meat hook gallows. Hanged the same day
were Oster and Bonhoeffer. The hangings were swift, the SS did not wait for one
to die before hanging up the next victim. The bodies were then burned on a wooden
pyre in the execution yard and the ashes buried in holes dug in the ground. In 1945,
Flossenbürg and its 74 sub-camps held some 40,000 prisoners, 11,000 of them women.
On April 16, the entire SS detachment of guards abandoned the camp leaving 1,526
seriously ill and emaciated prisoners to be liberated by units of the US 90th Infantry
Division on April 23. In the week that followed some 350 of these prisoners died.
Prior to liberation thousands of inmates were forced marched to other camps such
as Belsen or Mauthausen and during these death marches some 7,000 died on the way.
Today, the Flossenbürg Camp Cemetery of Honour contains 5,451 graves.

Unsung Peace Hero, or Unspeakable Traitor? The aristocratic, arrogant, blueblood
Admiral Wilhelm Franz Canaris in his powerful heyday, before his final downfall, disgrace
and unpleasant naked execution. He was a snob who despised Hitler's humble roots
and his highly-placed treason did more damage to Germany's war effort than probably
any other single cause. His cunning secret treachery doomed several crucial
battles, particularly the absolutely vital Battle of Kursk. We will never know
for sure, but it's quite possible that he single-handedly lost Germany the war.

PRISONERS OF WAR IN THE USA

On February 8, 1945, the US Army announces that there
are 359,258 P.O.W.s interned in the USA. These include 305,873 Germans, 50,561 Italians
and 2,820 Japanese. In all, 666 P.O.W. camps were set up in the USA during the war.

PUBLIC DOUBLE-HANGING

On February 10, 1945, in the village of
Hameau-Pigeon on the Cherbourg peninsula, hundreds of black
US troops were made to witness a double hanging. Two black US soldiers (Privates
Yancy and Skinner) were convicted of murder and rape and sentenced to death. Among
the spectators were twenty French witnesses including nineteen year old Marie Osouf,
the girl who was raped and the family of Auguste Lebarillier,
Maria's boy friend, who was murdered.

THE NATTER PROJECT

Forty kilometres north of Lake Constance lies the town of Waldsee.
It was here at the Bachem Werke, the 'Natter' project was first developed.
After years of trial and error the First Natter was prepared for launching. The
Natter was a rocket powered vertical take-off interceptor aircraft which would blast
its way into the oncoming bomber stream, fire its battery of 73mm anti-aircraft
rockets then dive and glide back to earth and in the process jettisoning the forward
part of the craft, including the pilot, and parachuting to the ground. On
March 1, 1945, watched by its inventor, Erich Bachem, the
first manned rocket powered Natter blasted off from the Heuberg Military
Training Area near Bachem. After some 55 seconds the BA 349 Natter crashed killing
its pilot, Lt. Lother Seiber. He became the first man ever to take off vertically
from the ground under rocket power. As the Allied armies were approaching Bachem
the Natter project was cancelled for the time being and no further tests were carried
out.

BREAKOUT

Near the town of Bridgend in the south of Wales stood the
Island Farm 'Prisoner of War Camp 198 for German P.O.W.s.
It was originally built to house workers at the huge Ordnance factory nearby. During
the night of March 10/11, 1945 an attempt was made by the
prisoners to escape. Using a 60 foot tunnel which had been dug during the previous
three months from Hut 9 near the fence, some 72 prisoners managed to get out of
the camp. Police, Army, Home Guard and civilians were mobilised and the area around
the camp was subjected to a vast search. Even children joined the search equipped
with toy rifles made from broom handles. Eleven prisoners were recaptured within
a few hours. Their intention was to reach the sea at Swansea and steal a boat then
sail to neutral Ireland. By March 16, all the rest were recaptured.
(Sixty years later the tunnel was reopened in the presence of a
number of former inmates who travelled to Wales for the opening celebration.)

OPERATION ‘CARTHAGE’(March 21, 1945)

At the request of the Danish resistance movement, a force of RAF Mosquitos from
487, 464 and 21 Squadrons of 140 Wing, escorted by Mustangs of Fighter Command,
attacked the Gestapo Headquarters in Copenhagen. The Gestapo
had taken over the five storey Shell House, the pre-war H/Q of the Shell Petroleum
Company. On the day of the raid it housed a large number of Danish resistance fighters
who had been arrested and were being interrogated as the first bombs fell. Some
prisoners were killed but 30 escaped during the bombing. Some 151 Gestapo agents
and their Danish collaborators were also killed.

Although the raid was a success, a horrific tragedy occurred nearby. One of the
Mosquitos, on its bombing run, struck a light mast in the railway goods yard, veered
to the left and crashed in a ball of fire near the Jeanne d'Arc
Catholic School. The fire and smoke from the crash was mistakenly targeted
by the next wave of Mosquitos which dropped their bombs on and around the crash
site. The resulting fires soon spread to other buildings and eventually engulfed
the school which burned to the ground in less than two hours. Eighty-six children
and ten teachers lost their lives in this tragedy and sixty-seven were injured.
When rescuers reached the school cellers they found the bodies of forty-two children
huddled together. They had all drowned in water from the firemen's
hoses.

SAFE BET

On March 27, 1945, Argentina declared war on the Axis
powers, thus bringing the number of countries fighting against the Axis to 53. Another
latecomer was Turkey who remained neutral through most of the conflict but declared
war on Germany in January, 1945. This was followed by Paraguay on February 8, Egypt
on February 24, Lebanon on February 27, Saudi Arabia on March 1 and finally Finland
on March 3.

ANTI-RED

On March 27, 1945, sixteen prominent anti-communist Poles
were invited to a conference with Russian officials to discus political matters.
All were arrested on arrival, sent to Moscow and imprisoned. Thus,
the mighty Soviet Union eliminated the last vestige of anti-communist leadership
in Poland.

END OF AN ERA

On March 29, 1945, the British Empire
Air Training Scheme was officially ended. Training schools were located in
Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Southern Rhodesia. Trained in these schools were
168,662 aircrew including 75,152 pilots, 40,452 navigators, 15,148 bomb aimers and
37,190 other miscellaneous aircrew categories, many of whom were trained in South
African Air Force schools.

RADIO WERWOLF

On April 1, 1945, the German station
'Radio Werwolf' began broadcasting for the first time from a special transmitter
in the town of Königswusterhausen, not far from Berlin. It was created by Propaganda
Minister Geobbels to rally the population to suicidal resistance. Its theme, repeated
over and over again was "Besser tot als rot" (Better dead than
red).

TANK PRODUCTION

Towards the end of the war, the German firm of Krupp was producing more tanks
than it did in previous years. This was proof that Allied bombing had failed. However,
production had to stop because of the bombing of the German rail network.
There were simply not enough trains to transport the tanks to the fronts.

GERMAN KAMIKAZES

On April 7, 1945, the first German kamikaze
attacks on Allied aircraft took place west of Hannover. Driven by desperation, the
volunteer pilots in their ME-109s fired their cannons at point blank range into
a stream of American bombers and then ramming them. Twenty-three bombers were destroyed
this way and another twenty-eight shot down by the escorting jet fighters during
the battle. On the eastern Front, twelve Luftwaffe pilots, led by Rudolf Escherich
from the Fighter Squadron Udet volunteered to form a suicide
mission to crash their planes into bridges spanning the river Oder.
The mission was a failure, many of the planes being shot down before
they reached the target and others failed to find the bridges as the area was blanketed
with smoke. With the Red Army across the Oder, further suicide missions were abandoned.

JAPANESE KAMIKAZES

The destruction by Japanese suicide planes was considerable. Thirty-four ships
from destroyers down were sunk and 288 ships damaged including 16 aircraft carriers,
fifteen battleships, eighty-seven destroyers and twenty-eight minelayers. From their
initial flights on October 25, 1944, until the end of the war, 1,228 suicide pilots
plunged to their deaths in a final act of desperation to stop the Allied invasion
of their homeland.

BOMBER WING KG-200.

A top secret wing of the Luftwaffe commanded by bomber ace Werner Baumbach. It
was within this wing that the Luftwaffe established its own suicide (kamikaze) units.
In February, 1944, KG-200 was responsible for all strategic and covert aerial missions.
Operational orders came direct from Hitler's own intelligence service, the S.D.
Many of the planes flown by KG-200 were captured Allied aircraft such as the American
B-17 and B-24. These were given Luftwaffe markings and colours. But not all, some
retained their original Allied markings and colours which completely fooled Allied
pilots and ground ack ack gunners. The most secret weapon of KG-200 was the MISTAL
bomber, usually a Junkers 88A with four tons of explosives packed into the cockpit.
Mounted on top of the bomber was a Messerschmitt BF 109F fighter, both planes controlled
by the pilot of the 109F. The bomber was aimed at its target before release. They
were intended to destroy bridges over the Elbe and Oder rivers thus delaying the
Soviet advance on Berlin. However, though some bridges were attacked,
in the end they proved to be a dismal failure.

TREASURE TROVE

The Kaiseroda Salt Mine at Merkers, north of Frankfurt,
gave up its secret to the men of the 358th Infantry Battalion of the 90th US Infantry
Division on April 8, 1945. Under shaft No. 3 and 1,600 feet
below ground, the American soldiers discovered a veritable treasure trove. Among
the hundreds of kilometres of tunnels and chambers they found in vault No. 8 almost
the entire gold and currency reserves of Hitler's Third Reich. More than 700 numbered
sacks were stored, each containing between 55 lbs and 81 lbs of gold bars and coins,
laid out in twenty rows. Currency to the value of $241,113,302 was also found in
sacks in vault No. 20, this included 110,000 English pounds and in 711 sacks were
US twenty dollar gold coins, $25,000 to a sack. In addition to this treasure, SS
loot stolen from the occupied countries of Europe was also stored here. This included
over 1,000 paintings, objets d'art and 189 boxes and suitcases filled with coins,
jewellery and silverware. In one vault were over two million books including the
Goethe library from Weimar. The removal of this treasure, estimated at 400 tons,
involved the use of thirty 10-ton trucks to transport the hoard to the American
Exchange Depository building on the Adolf Hitler-Allee in Frankfurt.(The
city of Frankfurt was captured on March 29, 1945, by the US 5th Division. During
the war it had suffered 5,559 dead in Allied air raids.)

INTERNMENT CAMP KETSCHENDORF

Established in April, 1945, by the Soviet occupation forces near the village
of Ketschendorf in Furstenwalde south-east of Berlin and
named 'Special Camp Number 5'. It housed internees who were arrested or kidnapped
by the Russian military forces. No reason was given for the arrests, they were simply
taken away and disappeared. Many were teenage boys who were never seen again by
their parents. At first the prisoners were primarily members of the Nazi Party and
members of the SS. Parents of the teenage boys arrested were also suspected of being
Nazis. In November, 1945, months after the war had ended, there were still 9,395
persons interned in Camp Ketschendorf. During this time it is believed that over
5,000 internees died due to the catastrophic conditions under which they were forced
to live. During 1952 and 1953 the site was being developed by the civil authorities
and many mass graves were discovered. Around 4,500 bodies were exhumed and reburied
in a mass grave at Halbe. Another camp 'Special Camp Number 2' was set up in the
former concentration camp at Buchenwald. It held 28,000 internees, 7,000 of whom
died from neglect and hunger. These camps were unknown to the outside
world till years after the war.

WRONG LISTING

On April 25, 1945, patrols of the US 69th Division's
273rd Infantry Regiment first made contact with the Soviet Forces in the village
of Leckwitz on the Elbe river. The nearby village of
Torgau has been incorrectly reported as the first meeting
place (it was in fact the second) and as such is mentioned in nearly all official
history books.

FIRST HELICOPTER RESCUE

In April, 1945, Captain James Green of the US Army Air Force, became the
first person in history to be rescued by a helicopter. While
searching for a downed transport plane in the Naga Hills in Burma, the light plane
in which he was flying ran out of fuel and crashed in the jungle. A week later a
search team reached the crash site to find Green barely alive. Badly injured, he
could not be carried out. Back at the airfield at Shinbwiyang a small Sikorsky helicopter
was available and the pilot, Lieutenant R. Murdock, decided to attempt a rescue.
Barely clearing the mountains, the helicopter managed to land and airlifted Captain
Green to safety.

It was not until the Korean War that the helicopter fully came
into its own.

ARCHIVES

On April 17, 1945, a special team of American Intelligence
agents searched a castle in the Hartz mountains belonging to Baron
Witilo Griesheim. In room after room the agents found, staked in piles, hundreds
of thousands of documents representing the entire archives of the German Foreign
Ministry. Some documents dated from 1871. When the war ended, it took a fleet of
over one hundred trucks to transport the archives to Berlin. The complete records
of Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry were uncovered in a salt
mine, 1,300 feet underground, near Grasleben. In a room in the Hotel Kyffhauser
in Sangerhausen, were found the SS Marriage Bureau Files. The Bureau was responsible
for investigating the background of all SS personnel and their brides to be. Permission
was granted only to those who could prove to be one hundred per cent pure 'Aryan'.

WELCOME TO LEIPZIG

The task of capturing the German city of Leipzig was given to the US 2nd Infantry
Division and the US 69th Division. The commander of Company G of the 2nd Division's
23rd Infantry was Captain Charles B. MacDonald. The city surrendered on the
20th of April, 1945 without much of a fight. As the troops
entered the city they were surrounded by teeming crowds of civilians and thousands
of armed Wehrmacht soldiers, British and American prisoners of war who were on work
detail in the town and thousands of slave workers. The chief of the city's police,
General von Grolman, welcomed them with a generous supply of cognac and champagne.
Captain McDonald returned to his battalion headquarters for further orders which
were to pull his men out from the city. He drove back to Leipzig once more to negotiate
the surrender only to find a real binge was taking place, his men now in an advanced
stage of intoxication and were really whooping it up with the city's fairer sex.
Disappointment followed when they sobered up to find the US 69th Division (General
Reinhardt) had entered the city from the south-east and claimed the kudos for capturing
the town. But not everyone was happy that April day. In his office in the Town Hall,
Alfred Freyburg, the town's mayor, was found seated at his desk, dead. His wife
and daughter sat opposite on armchairs, both dead from poison each had taken. Next
door, the city's treasurer, Dr Kurt Lisso, sat slumped on
his desk while nearby on a sofa lay his wife and 20 year old daughter. In an adjoining
room the body of Walter Dönnicke, the commander of the local Volksstrum, lay dead.
All had committed suicide. (As Leipzig lay in the future Russian
Zone of Germany, the city was handed over to Soviet troops on July 2, 1945. The
Soviet occupation would last for the next 44 years.) During this 'Cold War'
period, for some obscure reason, the Goosestep (Prussian Paradeschritt) was retained
by the East German Army until disbanded in 1990.

The suicide of Dr Kurt Lisso and family.

OPERATION ‘MANNA’

On April 29, 1945, aircraft of No 153 Squadron and 622 Squadron of RAF Bomber
Command, began dropping food parcels from a height of 400 feet to the starving Dutch
civilians. In the cold winter of 44/45, the 'Hunger Winter'
as the Dutch call it, northern Holland and the heavily populated cities in Western
Holland was still under German occupation. Around 18,000 of the elder, sick and
young had died through sickness and lack of sufficient food. Churchill had written
on April 10th, 'I fear we may soon be in the presence of a great tragedy'. In Amsterdam,
residents tore out the floors, window frames and doors of the houses which were
left empty after the Jews were deported to the East and used the wood to fuel the
fires in their unheated homes. The first food drop (284 bags) was over Ypenburg,
near the Hague, subsequent drops were on the Dundigt Racecourse. Before the food-drop
operation began an agreement was reached whereby German anti-aircraft units would
not fire on low flying aircraft dropping food. This was agreed to by the then Reich
Commissioner for the Netherlands, Artur Seyss-Inquart, who was later found guilty
of participating in the deportation of Jews. (He was hanged at Nuremberg on October
16, 1946) Over the next ten days the squadron flew 111 sorties, dropping 7,029 tons
of the much needed food. Soon, on May 2nd, the US 8th Army Air Force with their
B-17s joined in the rescue operation dropping a further 4,155 tons. In Holland today,
the 5th of May is celebrated as Liberation Day. It is estimated
that about 50,000 Dutch civilians died during the war because medical help and food
was not available.

THE COST

The liberation of Holland cost the lives of over 50,000 Allied soldiers. Altogether
4,500 Dutch soldiers died for their country as did 258 P.O.W.s who died in German
prison camps. At sea, a total of 1,500 Dutch sailors lost their lives and 104,000
Dutch Jews were exterminated. Some 23,000 citizens died in air-raids and over 5,000
died in concentration camps. Of the half million men transported to Germany as slave
labour, 30,000 never returned. Executions and massacres claimed over 2,800 victims,
19 of whom were women. In all, 237,300 Netherlanders perished during the Nazi occupation.
This does not include the 10,000 Dutch pro-Nazis who died fighting on the German
side. About 25,000 Dutchmen were pro-Nazi and fought for Germany.
Although many Dutchmen fought bravely on the Allied side it is
a sad fact that more went into battle wearing the field grey uniform of the enemy
than in the British khaki.

GRAND THEFT IN HOLLAND

The loot the Germans transported back to the Reich from Holland was staggering:

13,786 metal working machines

2,729 textile machines

18,098 electric motors

358 printing presses

31 dredgers

over 7,000 barges

90,000 lengths of railway line and a half million sleepers

over 60,000 motor cars, 40,000 trucks and 25,000 motor bikes

154,647 kilos of Dutch gold disappeared into the Reichsbank's safes in Berlin

320,000 cows, 472,036 pigs and 114,220 horses.

A total of 346 works of art were also stolen including 27 Rembrandts,
12 Hals, 47 Steens, 40 Rubens and 12 Van Goghs. Most of these paintings were recovered
after the war.

tunnel FLOODING

In the early morning of May 2, a group of sappers from the SS Nordland Division,
part of Steiner's 11th SS Panzer Army, were sent into the U-Bahn and S-Bahn rail
tunnels in Berlin directly under the Landwehr Canal near Trebbinestrasse. Demolition
charges were fastened to the ceiling of the tunnel, the ensuing explosion blasting
a large chunk out of the reinforced concrete roof allowing the canal waters to rush
in and flooding over twenty kilometres of tunnels up to a depth of one and a half
metres. Thousands of civilians and wounded soldiers were sheltering in the tunnels
as well as several train carriages acting as hospital trains packed with wounded.
In the S-Bahn tunnel under the Anhalter railway station, the Muncheberg Panzer Division
had set up its temporary command post. As the water rose to over a metre and a half
those sheltering there panicked, trampling others underfoot while overhead heavy
fighting continued. Casualties were impossible to determine as many could have already
died from their injuries in the underground dressing stations set up in some of
the tunnels. At the time it was thought that thousands had drowned but a recent,
more conservative, estimate puts the death rate at around the 100 mark.
Fifty bodies are known to be buried in the Jewish Cemetery on the
Gross Hamburgerstrasse.

GRAND THEFT IN BERLIN

Berlin fell to the Russians on May 2, 1945. A Major Feodor
Novikov of the Red Army ordered the vaults of the Reichbank to be opened. Still
in the vaults were 90 gold bars worth 1.3 million dollars and gold coins worth 2.1
million dollars. Also 400 million dollars worth of negotiable bonds. Major Novikov
ordered the vaults locked and demanded the keys. Shortly afterwards the entire contents
of the vault disappeared. The gold was never seen again, but the bonds keep turning
up even today all over the world! Another six and a half tons of gold, recovered
from Ribbentrop's castle 'Schloss Fuschl' near Salzburg and turned over to the US
Army on June 15, 1945, also disappeared and no records of it being received at the
Frankfurt US Foreign Exchange Depository can be found. In 1945 it was worth over
seven million dollars. Much of the gold recovered by the Americans
was re-smelted and in the process all hallmarks, Nazi symbols and identification
numbers, were erased.

OPERATION OVERCAST

Code name (later changed to Paperclip) for the project
which involved the search and capture of the Peenamunda V2 rocket scientists and
technicians who were now working in the tunnels at Nordhausen in the Hartz mountains.
All the Peenamunda documents relating to the design and construction of the V2 rockets
were hidden in an abandoned mine near the village of Dörten not far from Nordhausen.
The documents, when found by the Americans, weighed around fourteen tons. Six trucks
with trailers were needed to transport the hundreds of boxes of these documents
to the docks at Antwerp for shipment to the US. Also shipped were about 100 partly
assembled V2 rockets found in the tunnel workshops. The Russians were also searching
for these technicians and put out an offer of 50,000 Reichsmarks to Wernher von
Braun to entice the expert to come over to the Soviet side.

VOLUNTARY SURRENDER

While the Russians were looting Berlin an anti-tank unit of the US 324th Infantry
Regiment was patrolling a remote area in the Austrian Tyrol when they encountered
a lone civilian pedalling towards them on a bicycle. He introduced himself as
Mangus von Braun, brother of Vernher von Braun and said
that his brother and a team of V2 engineers were billeted in a hotel up ahead and
wanted to surrender. All were taken into custody including around 500 other Peenemunda
technicians who were rounded up in next few days. All were incarcerated in a German
military barracks in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. On September 29, 1945, von Braun and
six other specialists arrived in the US as 'Wards of the US Army'. On December 2,
another fifty-five specialists arrived and by February, 1946, the total number of
V2 men in the US had reached 115. By May, 1948, a total of 492 German specialists
plus 644 of their dependants had been evacuated to the USA. The first V2 missile
was test-fired on march 14, 1946 and on June 28 of that year an upper-air research
V2 soared to a height of sixty-seven miles. This successful launch
by the Peenemunda team contributed greatly to the start of the American missile
program which eventually put a man on the Moon.

OUR ALLIES(May 3, 1945)

On this day the British 6th Airborne and the US 7th Armoured Division captured
the north German town of Wismar. The actual capture was
carried out by men of the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion. Just outside the town
were the Russian front lines from where drunken soldiers, fuelled by a mixture of
vodka and rocket fuel, were flocking into town in search of wine, women and song.
The main hospital in Wismar was now occupied by the Paras. That night, a group of
Russian soldiers approached the main gate of the hospital and demanded that all
German nurses be brought out. Told that no women were here they pushed the sentry
aside and entered the courtyard. A half dressed Para pocked his head out of a window
and shouted 'They are our girls, get lost'. Suddenly a shot rang out followed by
the rattle of a British Sten-gun. The drunken Russians scattered as shooting broke
out on both sides. It was all over in minutes, the Russians retiring to their own
lines. In the cobbled courtyard of the hospital lay the bodies
of six dead Soviet soldiers.

BLIMPS

The forgotten warriors of World War II, known as Blimps,
there were about 15 Squadrons of these LTAs (Lighter Than Air) in operation when
the war ended. They were a most dependable and effective defence against submarines.
Around 35,600 operational flights were made over the Atlantic, 20,300 in the Pacific
area. No ship escorted by a Blimp was ever sunk. Only one Blimp was reported lost.
On the night of July 18, 1943, it engaged an enemy submarine on the surface in the
Caribbean. It was brought down by the submarine's gunfire but all the crew were
rescued next day. Squadrons of these Blimps continued service in the US Navy after
the war until the 1960s when they faded from the scene.

VICTIMS(May 5, 1945)

The only US citizens killed by enemy bombs were a woman and five children. They
died in Lake View, Oregon, when they picked up a bomb that
was carried across the Pacific by balloon from Japan. The Rev. Archie Mitchell,
minister of the Christian Alliance church in Bly, his wife and five children, aged
between eleven and thirteen, were hiking through the Fremont National Forest looking
for a picnic spot when one of the children picked up something that looked like
a large balloon. They started dragging it from the wood when the attached bomb exploded.
When Rev Mitchell caught up with them he found his wife and the five children all
dead. Hundreds of these balloons, 25 feet in diameter, were launched
against the USA and Canada but only 290 actually landed.

LAST SURRENDERS

The last Wehrmacht soldiers to surrender were a small company on the tiny Channel
Island of Minquiers and a group of eleven soldiers on the
island of Spitzbergen. A French fishing boat, skippered
by Lucian Marie, approached the island of Minquiers and anchored nearby. A fully
armed German soldier approached and asked for help saying "We've
been forgotten by the British, perhaps no one on Jersey told them we were here,
I want you to take us over to England, we want to surrender." This was on
the 23rd of May, 1945, three weeks after the war ended!

Under German occupation since June 30, 1940, the German garrison surrendered
the Channel Islands on May 9. This was the only British home territory occupied
by the enemy. On a tiny outpost of Hitler's Third Reich, eleven German soldiers
and naval marines maintained a top secret weather monitoring station on an isolated
part of the east island of Spitzbergen, code name, 'Operation Haudegen'. Although
they were told that the war had ended on September 4, 1945, nothing was done to
fetch them back. They survived on canned food and by shooting polar bears until
their distress calls were picked up by the Norwegians. A seal-hunting ship was sent
to their rescue. It arrived on September 4 and its captain accepted their surrender,
four months after the war had ended!

STRIKE

British reluctance to sack top Nazi officials in the Ruhr coal
mines was the cause of a strike by German coal workers in September, 1945.
The coal workers simply refused to work along side them. These former Nazi overseers,
whose brutal methods caused the deaths of many slave workers as well as German miners,
were eventually sacked. Coal production in the Ruhr immediately increased.

LIGHT UP

On May 28, 1945, all British and American merchant ships
on the Atlantic and Indian oceans were now allowed to show their full navigation
lights and need no longer darken ship. Convoys were abolished. These conditions
did not apply to the Pacific theatre.

‘FLYING BOMB’ CASUALTIES

In the first four months of 1945, 1,275 persons were killed and 2,578 injured
from V1 and V2 attacks on Britain.
On the 27th of March the last V2 rocket fell on London killing 127 people and wounding
423.

TOKYO RAID

The most destructive air raid of the war was against Japan's capital city, Tokyo.
During the night of March 9/10, 1945, 1,665 tons of napalm-filled
bombs was dropped on the city from 279 US B-29 bombers. The death
toll was greater than that at Hiroshima or Nagasaki, the official count being
83,793 Japanese killed in the 30 minute raid. Another 41,000 were severely injured
or burned. Fourteen B-29s were lost. The Allied air attacks on Tokyo destroyed 15.8
square miles of the city. As of July 1, 1945, only about 200,000 residents of Tokyo
remained in the city, all others had been evacuated to safer areas. Japan lost 658,595
lives as a result of conventional and atomic air raids.

TOKYO ROSE

Iva Ikuko Toguri, an American citizen with Japanese parents.
War broke out when she was visiting her parents in Japan and she decided to stay
on and work for the Japanese Broadcasting Company. She was given the name 'Yokyo
Rose' by the GIs who listened to her radio show. Although she never used the nickname
she introduced herself as 'Orphan Ann' during her 'Music for You' segment on Radio
Tokyo's English-language 'The Zero Hour'. There were more than one Tokyo Rose, American
GIs branded all female radio broadcasters with the name and there were at least
a dozen but she was the only one persecuted. After the war she was wrongly convicted
of treason and after spending some time in prison (about six years) she was pardoned
by President Gerald Ford in 1977. Iva Toguri died in September,
2006, in Chicago. She was 90.

JAIL BREAK

Richard Sakakida was a native of Hawaii and son of Japanese
parents. As a naturalized American he joined the C.I.C. (US Counter Intelligence
Corps). Sent on a secret mission to the Philippines, he was taken prisoner when
the Japanese invaded that country. While working for the enemy as an interpreter,
he was able to arrange meetings with the guerrilla forces. Their leader, Ernest
Tupas, and many of his followers were locked up in Muntinglupa prison in Manila.
Sakakida and a group of guerrillas, dressed in Japanese uniforms, entered the prison
and overpowering the guards, released Tupas and nearly 500 of his followers, most
of whom fled to the mountains to continue their guerrilla activities.
After the war, Richard Sakakida was awarded the US Bronze Star
for his part in one of the greatest jail breaks of the war.

P.O.W. TRAIN DISASTER(July 16, 1945)

A few weeks after the war ended, a US military freight
train carrying tanks crashed into the rear of a train carrying German prisoners
of war. The P.O.W. train had stopped due to an engine breakdown and the US train
carrying the tanks had been given a signal by the American signalman to proceed
despite the track ahead being blocked. On the P.O.W. train, 96
German soldiers were killed and six killed on the US train. This happened
at Assling, near Munich and was Germany's worst rail disaster
in the previous fifty years.

FORGOTTEN PRISONERS

The repatriation of Italian P.O.W.s from Russia took place between September
1945 and March 1946. A total of 10,087 were released from the Soviet camps where
many had died. Twenty-eight of the prisoners were considered 'Fascist War Criminals'
by the Soviets and unjustly accused of the most horrendous crimes. They were detained
for a further twelve years and only after the death of Stalin in 1954 were they
released. One prisoner, Father Giovanni Brevi, kept a diary in which he listed all
the names of prisoners who died in the camp. Alongside each name he added the cause
of death; starvation, torture and shooting etc.

INTERNEES

During the Pacific war, 291 American airmen were interned in
the Soviet Union. They were the crews of 37 planes which had to make emergency
landings on Soviet soil after bombing operations over Japan. All were interned in
a camp near Tashkent from which most of them 'escaped' to Teheran in Iran. The dilemma
these prisoners created for the Soviets was that under international law, a neutral
country during wartime (the Soviet Union and Japan were not at war) was prohibited
from releasing combatants from belligerent countries who came into their custody.
The so-called 'escapes' were secretly negotiated between the US and the Soviet Union.
(In spite of its neutrality treaty with Russia, the Japanese military
contemplated an attack on Russia from the east but in one of the most fateful decisions
of the war decided instead to intensify their push south into Indonesia.)

DENMARK'S SHAME

As the war drew to its close, between 200 and 250 thousand German refugees fled
to Denmark from the advancing Red Army. Six months after the war ended, Dr. Kirsten
Lylloff became curious as to the great number of babies and children's graves in
a cemetery at Aalborg where she used to live and practice. The refugees, mostly
women and children, were at first housed in schools and local halls until later
in 1945 around 142 camps were set up for them. Danish civilians were forbidden to
have any contact whatsoever with the refugees. Dr. Lylloff discovered
that by the end of 1945, 13,492 refugees had died in the camps. This included
around 7,000 children under the age of five. Most had died from malnutrition, dehydration
and curable illnesses such as scarlet fever. Medical assistance was consistently
denied the refugees by the Danish medical authorities and the Red Cross. After five
years of Nazi occupation from April, 1940 to May, 1945, the Danish authorities were
in no mood to play 'nurse' to these unfortunate German refugees. Fear that they
would be branded collaborators by the Allies was another factor. During the German
occupation over 10,000 young Danish men joined the German forces to fight on the
Eastern Front. Around 6,000 were killed.

SWEDEN'S SHAME!

During 1939-1940, the Stockholm Enskilda Bank (SEB) of neutral Sweden purchased
all the branches of the Bosch Group that were situated outside Germany. This bank
acted as a cloak for Hitler's regime and also helped the giant corporations such
as IG Farben and Krupp to hide their foreign subsidiaries in order to avoid confiscation
by the Allies. This association with Nazi Germany did not end there, massive shipments
of iron ore were sent to Germany from the Kiruna-Gällivare ore fields in Northern
Sweden. There is no doubt that this material support helped extend the war by several
months. The Enskilda Bank also helped the Nazis dispose of many assets confiscated
from Dutch Jews prior to their deaths in Auschwitz. In 1940, Sweden was coerced
into allowing German troops to march through the country to Norway during the German
invasion.

BRITAIN'S SHAME!

British policy towards the Jews of Europe during WWII leaves little to be proud
of. It was the British Government which did its best to block all escape routes
out of German occupied territory to these unfortunate people. If they had been treated
as refugees and not as prospective Palestine immigrants there is no doubt that much
more would have been done to help them. There was extreme reluctance by British
authorities to admit refugee Jews to any of its territories. Official thinking in
many government circles at that time was that Jews were part of the nations among
whom they lived and were not a distinct entity and therefore had no special claim
to help. i.e. a Dutch Jew was a Dutchman, a Polish Jew, a Pole, in spite of the
fact that they were persecuted as Jews, not as Dutch or Poles.
(Of the 460,000 Jews in Palestine at that time, around 30,000 served with the British
armed forces. Of the Palestine Arabs, about 9,000 donned the British forces uniform.)

GERMANY'S SHAME!

About 90% of the German legal profession aligned themselves voluntarily with
the Nazi regime. During this time they handed out no less than 45,000 death sentences.
The two most notorious judges were Judge Oswald Rothaug, who once sent a Jewish
shoe wholesaler named Katzenberger to the gallows for allowing a German girl to
sit on his lap, and the Berlin Peoples Court Judge, Roland Freisler, who dispensed
death sentences at every opportunity. Freisler was killed during an Allied air raid
on Berlin on February 3, 1945, a falling beam crushing his skull. (He is buried
in his wife’s family grave in the Forrest Cemetery in Dahlem, Berlin) After the
war, only a few judges were ever prosecuted for judicial murder, none receiving
a death sentence. After the war about 90 found re-employment in the West German
Justice System. In 1941, the age at which a death sentence could be given was reduced
to 14 years. In 1940, about 900 German civilians were executed. This had risen to
over 5,000 by 1943. Between 1943 and 1945, the 258 Peoples Court
Judges and prosecutors had sentenced to death a total of around 7,000 people.

ARGENTINA'S SHAME!

Under the rule of Juan Peron, Argentine provided a safe haven for hundreds of
Nazi war criminals. Set up in 1944 by Otto Skorzeny, the escape route known as 'Odessa'
(Organization Der Ehemaligen SS Angehorigen) Organization of Former SS Members,
helped many top Nazis to escape the justice of the Allies. In 1950 Argentine held
the record for helping these illegal immigrants to settle. War criminals such as
Adolf Eichman, Joseph Mengeleand and Claus
Barbie, were among those who disappeared from sight at the end of the war.
Pope Pius X11 (Eugenio Pacelli) and Odwal Hugal, a prominent bishop in the Vatican
endorsed the hiding of these Nazis and helped their escape plans for entry into
Argentina where most lived in relative safety for the rest of their lives.

PLÖTZENSEE PRISON

In Berlin's infamous Plötzensee Prison, constructed between
1869 and 1879 on a 62 acre site, 2,891 persons were executed during the twelve year
reign of National Socialism, 1,437 of these were German. Also included were 679
persons from Czechoslovakia, 254 from Poland and 245 from France. During the years
1933 to 1936, forty-five persons were beheaded by the executioners axe the prison
courtyard. In 1937 the guillotine was put in place in the execution chamber, being
brought from its former home in the Bruchsal prison at Baden. In that year a total
of thirty-seven prisoners were beheaded. In 1938, fifty-six prisoners were executed
and in 1939, ninety-five prisoners were put to death. In 1942, a steel beam, to
which eight iron hooks were suspended, was fitted between the walls of the chamber.
The first victims to die by this slow strangulation method were members of the resistance
group known as the 'Red Orchestra' whose members consisted mostly of Berliners,
forty percent of whom were women. After the failed July 20 coup, ninety persons
were executed here for their part in the conspiracy. The executioners were paid
an annual salary of 3,000 Reichmarks plus sixty-five Reichmarks for each execution.
The guillotine was badly damaged during the night air raid on September 7/8, 1943,
when a bomb hit the execution chamber. After this raid, 186 prisoners
were executed in groups of eight to prevent them escaping from the damaged prison.
The execution building is now preserved as a Memorial to the Victims of National
Socialism 1933-1945.

Among the 5,000 European Jews who emigrated to Palestine before the outbreak
of war, 734 were killed in action after volunteering for the British armed forces.
As the only Jewish fighting unit in the war, they saw action against the Wehrmacht
in North Africa, Greece, Crete and in Italy. In Poland, after the German invasion
in 1939, around 61,000 Jewish soldiers were among the 400,000 Polish Army men taken
prisoner when Poland surrendered. They were separated from their Polish comrades-in-arms
and sent to Germany as slave labourers. Not many survived the hunger
and brutality imposed on them.

THE JEWISH BRIGADE

In 1944, the Jewish Brigade, consisting of three infantry battalions and commanded
by Brigadier Ernest Benjamin, became part of the British Army fighting in Italy
under its own official Zionist flag. After the war, the Brigade carried out many
clandestine operations in Europe as secret vengeance squads seeking out former concentration
camp guards and SS officers who had gone into hiding when the war ended. Called
D.I.N. 'Dahm Y'Israel Nokeam' (The Blood of Israel Will Take Revenge). It hunted
down over one hundred ex-SS members in the first two month period of their operation.
Their method was straight forward, first apprehend the victim for routine questioning,
drive him to a safe location in a wood and there the Brigade identified themselves
and then passed out a death sentence. The victim was then immediately
strangled or in some cases shot.

The spare-time activities of the Brigade was to help other Jews, who survived
the concentration camps, to get to Palestine despite the British blockade. When
the Brigade received instructions to return to Britain and disband, 130 stayed behind
to carry on the work, especially the rehabilitation of thousands of Jewish orphan
children. They achieved this by swapping identities with young Jewish persons from
the many displaced persons (DPs) camps in Europe. These Jews were then sent to ports
in southern France for transportation to Palestine. As one 'double' remarked
"Out of the darkness of the Holocaust we were able to show them
the way back to joy and normality."

GERMANY'S LAST HOPE

The entire youth of Germany, boys of 14 to 17 years, were expected to turn the
war around during the last days of Hitler's Third Reich. But reality soon overcame
the illusion. The Hitler Youth and the
Volkstrum, consisting of old men, were Germany's last hope of survival. These
troops were all that stood between Germany and Armageddon. Over a thousand of these
boy soldiers were sent to defend the city of Breslau. There, they awaited the Russian
onslaught. When it came, every house became a strongpoint. Many of these young boys
killed themselves out of sheer terror of falling into the hands of the Soviets but
their comrades fought on desperately for days more until the city surrendered on
May 6, 1945. These boy soldiers only helped prolong a war which had long been lost.
In Hitler's last public appearance he decorated the Hitler Youth member Alfred Zeck,
from Goldenau, with the Iron Cross. Zeck was only twelve years
old, becoming the youngest recipient of the prestigious medal.

12 YEAR-OLD HEROES

The 12th SS Division 'Hitlerjugend' consisted of 22,540
officers and young soldiers. many aged between 12 and 14. Only 12,500 survived the
Normandy campaign 1944, and By the end of the war only 455 members of the Division
survived. On March 19th, 1945, Hitler, on his 56th birthday, held a reception outside
his Berlin bunker for twenty Hitler Youth members, his 'Young Heroes' as he called
them. They received Iron Crosses for single-handedly knocking out a Soviet Tank
with a Panzerfaust.

The very last-known photo of Adolf Hitler outside his Führerbunker. He refused
to leave Berlin as the symbolic heart of Germany. Perhaps here he was mulling
over the damage which the morning's Soviet shelling had wrought to the bunker—the
last redoubt of his empire—as they both crumbled, literally, around him.

THE HALBE POCKET

In a last desperate stand before the fall of Berlin,
General Busse's 9th Army, retreating from the Oder, fought a ferocious battle in
the forests around the small town of Halbe 40 kms south-east
of Berlin. Surrounded by the army of the Soviet Marshall Georgi Konev, all avenues
of escape were closed and in the following slaughter the 9th Army suffered catastrophic
losses compatible with any suffered in the Soviet Union. As one witness remarked
'The massacre in that forest was appalling, wounded were left untreated and screaming
by the roadside'. In this desperate battle over 50,000 soldiers of both sides and
many civilians, mostly refugees fleeing from the east, were killed and buried near
where they died, in woods, fields, private gardens and roadside graves. It took
months for the local population to clear the forest and surrounding area of corpses
which were dug up and reburied in the war cemetery at Halbe (Waldfriedhof
Halbe) the largest World War II German cemetery. There are over 22,000 graves,
with hundreds of headstones simply marked 'Unknown'. Many markers mention mass burials
of 30, 50, 100 or more unknown soldiers. Every year for a decade after the battle,
scores of bodies were still being discovered in shallow graves in the woods around
the town. In the battle around Halbe at least 20,000 soldiers of the Red Army died,
most of them buried in the cemetery on the Baruth-Zossen road. The number of refugees
killed is not known but must have been in the hundreds. Around 120,000 German soldiers
who survived the Halbe Pocket Battle were taken prisoner and ended up in Soviet prison
camps.

Author's note: in August 1988, my wife and I visited the cemetery,
having first obtained the necessary permission and special passes from the East
German communist authorities. Our guide, Walter Passoth, from the village of Münchehofe,
remarked that he believed we were the first foreigners (Engländer) to visit the
cemetery.

MUNCHEHOFE

As the Russian troops encircled the villages of Halbe, Neundorf, Buchholtz, Prieros
and Munchehofe, bombing, strafing and artillery shelling became intense. When the
barrage subsided, 17 year-old Ilse Kutschewsky, who had
been hiding under piles of household junk in the cellar of her parents bakery in
Munchehofe for the past week, emerged to survey the debris
of war. Bodies of German and Russian soldiers, civilians and refugees were lying
everywhere, on the street, and in the gardens many still alive and crying out for
help. To help out in the local makeshift hospital and morgue, already filled with
the dead and dying, she noticed a soldier, barely conscious and with his leg partly
blown off. Grabbing a scissors she cut through the remaining strips of skin and
muscle thus separating the leg from the body. A tourniquet was applied to the upper
part of the thigh but on checking his condition some minutes later she found that
he had died. After the Russians had overran the villages and continued their march
to Berlin, the task of cleaning up began. Bodies found on the street and gardens
were dragged by the residents to the local cemetery and placed in a large pits dug
by the locals. One unmarked grave, containing around thirty bodies, can be seen
today just inside the entrance to the Munchehofe cemetery. (note: Ilse Kutschewsky is now Mrs. George Duncan, wife of the author of this website,
both now resident in Australia).

AUSSIES NEEDLESSLY WASTED

Australian pilots were needlessly wasted on missions
of no tactical benefit to Australia. The last months of the war saw these young
pilots assigned to an inferior role shooting up enemy positions on odd islands of
no strategic importance bypassed during the American advance. Many were shot down
by anti-aircraft fire or crash landed when they ran out of fuel. Eager to participate
in the real war further north, which was 'OUT OF BOUNDS' to Australians, they felt
'left out' of the really important operations that were being fought to bring the
war to a speedy end. These pilots gave their lives in the backwaters to feed the
ego of General Douglas MacArthur who had no intention of
bestowing laurels on the brows of anyone but himself and his own men. In spite of
his promise that Australian troops would be integral to the liberation of the Philippines,
his fanatical determination to re-capture his former home, alone and without the
help of his allies, caused great indignation and bitterness within the ranks of
Australian Air Force Squadrons.

The campaigns, in which Australians replaced US troops needed in MacArthur's
campaign against the Philippines, i.e. New Britain, Bouganville,
Tarakan, Brunai Bay and Balikpapan, made no difference to the outcome of
the war or the time it took to bring the Pacific war to a close. The capture of
the airfield at Balikpapan for instance, cost 229 Australian lives but could not
be repaired before the end of the war. At Brunei Bay, 114
Australians died for what was planned to be a British naval anchorage but it was
never used. At Tarakan, 225 men of the 26th Brigade of the
Australian 9th Division, died in a campaign that lasted 52 days. With the end of
active hostilities, the troops were left wondering what it was all about. The capture
of the island had not shortened the war by even one day. The campaign had no military
or strategic value, some officers described the effort as "a complete
waste of time", another said "All it was good for was killing
Japs and to bury our dead".(Japanese dead totalled 1,540.)

WHAT IF?

If China had been a united country and combined the forces of the Peoples Liberation
Army with the Nationalist Army instead of against each other, it could well be that
the Japanese forces would have been forced to withdraw early in the war. The self-seeking
leaders of the two armies, Chiang Kai-shek of the Nationalists
and Mao Tse Tung of the Peoples Liberation Army uselessly
wasted time in confrontation with each other instead of concentrating on the common
enemy, Japan.

RE-EDUCATION FILM FLOP

At the cessation of hostilities in Europe a campaign was launched by the Allies
to re-educate the Germans in the hope that they (the Germans) would grovel, stoop,
cringe and beg forgiveness. In a country 60% devastated by war and with chaos and
disorder everywhere, the Allies forced 2,000 German civilians to watch a film titled
'Todesmühlen' (Mills of Death) screening at ten different
cinemas. In the film, scenes from the concentration camps of Auschwitz, Belsen,
Dachau and Nordhausen were shown. About half the audience choose not to respond
but the 1,040 who did said the film should be shown to all Germans. The surprising
thing was that 85.5% felt no sense of collective guilt. 82% admitted that they had
no knowledge of the Nazi death camps. 70% said they thought the German people should
not share responsibility. Few civilians in Germany bought the idea of collective
guilt. An opinion poll conducted by the US Army in November
1945, showed that fifty per cent of those polled believed that,
with around six million unemployed, National Socialism was a good idea but badly
carried out. The film 'Todesmühlen' as a re-education device, was a total failure.

PIERRE LAVAL (1883-1945)

Three times Prime Minister of France, the third time head of the French Vichy
Government, he was given asylum in Spain when the Allied armies invaded France.
On July 31, 1945, he was flown to Linz in Austria and there he gave himself up to
the US authorities who promptly turned him over to the French army. Eventually he
was tried by a French court and sentenced to death for treason. After a failed attempt
at suicide he was executed by firing squad. (He is buried in the
Cimetiere de Montparnasse in Paris.)

FEAR IN WAR

In a research into Fear in Combat, the US Army questioned
the men of four divisions, a total of 6,020 men.

304 admitted to a violent pounding of the heart

254 to a sinking stomach feeling

207 to shaking and trembling

190 to a sick stomach

183 to coming out in a cold sweat

74 to vomiting

46 to losing control of the bowels

28 to urinating in their pants.

US SERVICEMEN: FIT FOR DUTY?

From 1941 to 1945, a total of 17,955,000 Americans were medically examined for
induction into the armed forces. Some 6,420,000 (35.8 percent) were rejected as
unfit because of some physical disability. Altogether, 16,112,566 Americans served
their country in World War II. A total of 38.8 percent (6,332,000) were volunteers.
In all, 405,399 American service men and women gave up their lives in a war that
cost the US $288 Billion Dollars.

The most decorated unit in U.S. military history is the
442nd Regimental Combat Team, whose motto was "Go for
Broke." It consisted of Japanese-American volunteers. Together they won 4,667
major medals, awards, and citations, including 560 Silver Stars 4,000 Bronze
Stars, 52 Distinguished Service Crosses, and one Medal of Honor, plus 54 other
decorations. It also held the distinction of never having one single case of
desertion during the entire war.

A VERY LONG WAR

The last Japanese soldier to surrender was Captain Fumio Nakahira
who held out until April, 1980, before being discovered at Mt. Halcon on Mindoro
Island in the Philippines. Before that, there was Onoda Hiroo,
discovered in the jungle of Lubang Island on March 11, 1974, twenty-nine years after
the war ended. He has since published a book 'No Surrender: My Thirty-Year War'.
Nakamura Teruo was discovered on the island of Morotai on
December 18, 1974, still believing the war was on. Sergeant Yoloi
Shoichi survived in the jungles of Guam until found on January 24, 1972.
He died in September, 1997 at the age of 82.

RAPE IN WAR

The rape of Jewish women by Nazi forces is well documented. After the attack
on Poland in September,1939, mass rape of Jewish women was an everyday occurrence.
In Warsaw, forty women were taken from the ghetto to a party in the officers mess
and forced to drink, strip and dance with German officers after which they were
raped repeatedly before being sent back to the ghetto. In the concentration camps,
Jewish women were raped by their guards. This of course contravened the Nazi race
laws that prohibited sexual relations between 'Aryans' and Jews. At the Nuremberg
War Crimes Trials evidence was presented that hundreds of Russian women were raped.
Many French women, especially those in the resistance, were brutally raped during
the occupation. Not only German soldiers but British and American
fighting men did their fair share of raping.

During the occupation of Japan, Japanese women were subjected to mass rape by
the soldiers of the occupation forces starting on the first day, August 21, 1945.
Over a period of ten days, 1,336 cases of rape were reported. In one instance a
woman was raped by twenty-seven US soldiers. In Hiroshima, occupied by the British
and Commonwealth Forces, many Japanese women were raped. One young woman was raped
by twenty Australian soldiers. On August 21, 1945, Japanese authorities decided
to set up a Recreation and Amusement Association (RAA) for the benefit of Allied
occupation troops in an attempt to cut down the instances of rape. At its peak,
around 20,000 prostitutes worked for the RAA. On September 20, 1945, the first brothel
for the 350,000 US troops in Japan was opened. It was called 'Babe Garden'. It was
closed down on March 27, 1946 to stop the spread of VD. Unfortunately these brothels
did little to minimize the incidence of rape during the first year of the occupation.

SOVIET RAPES IN BERLIN: A HUGE, UNKNOWN TOTAL

The official figures for Berlin rapes by Soviet troops does exist but has never
been published. However, Berlin’s former mayor, Ernst Reuter,
said that the figure given him was 90,000. In 1945, Berlin
had a population of some 2,700,000 of which about 2,000,000 were women. Many rapes
of course were never reported and the figure of 90,000 includes only hospitalized
cases and doctors reports. Some 10,000 women in Berlin died as a result of rape,
many by suicide. The death rate was thought to have been much higher among the 1.4
million estimated victims in East Prussia, Silesia and Pomerania. Doctors were besieged
by women seeking information on the best way to commit suicide. A charity institution,
orphanage and maternity hospital, 'Haus Dehlem' was forcibly entered by second line
Russian troops and pregnant women and women who had just given birth were repeatedly
raped. In the Soviet Zone of Germany nearly 90% of females ages
between 10 and 80 were raped in what undoubtedly was the largest case of mass rape
in history. This included women expelled from the eastern provinces. Among
the rape victims were many women who became prominent figures in post-war Germany.
Hannelore Kohl, wife of former Chancellor Helmut Kohl was raped when twelve years
old, along with her mother while they tried to escape from Berlin on a train heading
for Dresden. Hannelore Kohl committed suicide in 2001.

Most German children born in Berlin in 1946 were the result of rape. Women and
young girls were forcibly dragged from their homes and raped, the drunken Soviet
Mongolian soldiers queuing up to await their turn. For two whole
weeks these mass rapes of women continued. Some Jewish women, thinking that
their nationality would save them, showed their identity cards to the rapists but
none of them could even read. Marshal Zhukov issued orders
that any soldier caught in the act of rape after the two week period
was up, was to be shot on the spot. Many a Russian soldier met his end this
way. Although no US soldier was ever executed for rape in Germany, as one GI wrote:
"many a sane American family would recoil in horror if they knew
how 'our boys' over here conduct themselves." The psychological effects on
many of these rape victims were devastating, future relationships with men became
extremely difficult for the rest of their lives. (Between 1942 and 1945, a total
of 2,420 rapes were reported in England, 3,620 in France and more than 11,040 in
Germany by the occupying troops.) It is estimated that around two
million German women had undergone an illegal abortion in the three years after
the war ended.

TRANSFERRED

By September, 1944, around one million and thirty thousand prisoners from the
Soviet Gulags were transferred to the Red Army. Political prisoners and those convicted
of anti-Soviet activities were not released. Further releases were made in the Spring
of 1945 just weeks before the onslaught on Berlin. Exchanging a Gulag death for
a hero's death at the front was motivation enough for many of these prisoners, five
of whom later became 'Heroes of the Soviet Union'. Fed a daily dose of anti-German
propaganda and films showing the terrible atrocities committed by Nazi troops while
in Russia, they soon became full of a burning hatred for the enemy and longed for
revenge. Once on enemy soil they were confronted with signs saying
"Red Army soldier: You are now on German soil, the hour of revenge
has struck." The orgy of rape, looting, murder and drunkenness committed
by these ex-prisoners of the Gulags on innocent German women and children was a
direct result of this indoctrination. (At this time Berliners were
saying that optimists were learning English and the pessimists learning Russian.)

Berliner women's worst nightmares were realised when they were repeatedly raped
in their tens of thousands by the barbarous invading Soviet hordes. Many were
brutally murdered. Our "valiant Soviet allies" were actually at first officially
encouraged to rape, murder and take loot as legitimate Communist wartime plunder.
Until the disgusted Marshal Zhukov finally intervened and stopped the mayhem—as
good Bolsheviks and animalistic Mongolian riffraff—most raped away with bloodthirsty
relish.

SUICIDE ATTACKS

Prior to the proposed invasion of mainland Japan,
Operation Olympic on November 1, 1945, the Japanese military
speeded up its preparations to attack the Allied invasion force while still at sea,
coming up with some very desperate ideas for suicide attacks of differing kinds:

Thousands of volunteer pilots were hastily trained for airplane suicide
attacks. Over 500 aircraft of all types were available for these kamikaze missions.

Around 400 Koryu and Kairyu suicide submarines (five and two-man versions
of the Kaiten) would set out on their one-way journey. Also prepared to sacrifice
their lives were 300 volunteers for the Shinyo human torpedoes.

Most bizarre of all were the hundreds of strong swimmers who would swim
out with deadly mines strapped to their backs to explode against the hulls of
the Allied ships.

Just when all was set for the greatest military mass suicide in history, the
atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. On August 14, 1945, the Japanese
ordered all kamikaze operations to cease. The originator of the
first kamikaze attack, Vice Admiral Takijiro Ohnishi, committed suicide by disembowelling
himself.

WAR BRIDES

Around 48,000 European women, with 22,000 children, emigrated to Canada during
and after the Second World War. Today in Canada there are some 300,000 children
or grandchildren of these War Brides. Over one million American GIs were stationed
in Britain in the two years preceding D-Day. Approximately 130,000 were black Americans.
Near 70,000 British girls married their GI boy friends and 47,000 married their
Canadian soldier. About 20,000 children were born to these GIs and just under 1,000
were black children. By 1950, a total of 14,175 German and 758 Japanese war brides
arrived in the USA. In Australia, by 1950, about 650 Japanese girls married their
Aussie boy friends and were admitted to Australia when the admission ban was lifted
in 1952. Many of these brides experienced prejudice, jealousy and resentment by
Australian women who were enraged that their soldiers had chosen foreign girls as
wives. Some 7,000 Australian women married their American GI boy friends and travelled
to the USA as war brides. Between 1946 and 1949 some 20,000 German
women immigrated to the USA to start a new life with their American husbands or
boy friends. Most found that they were anything but welcome. (The first US troops
arrived in Brisbane, Queensland, on Christmas Eve, 1941.)

MEMORIALS

In 1989, in Britain, the UK National Inventory of War Memorials was established.
Its database lists around 45,000 memorials to those who gave their lives during
World Wars 1 and 11. The best known is the Cenotaph in London,
erected in 1919 and rebuilt on the same spot on Armistice Day in 1920. There are
222 memorials marking the site of plane crashes, both RAF and Luftwaffe aircraft.
The War Room at No 10, Rue Franklin-Roosevelt in the town of Reims, France, where
the German surrender was accepted by General Eisenhower is preserved exactly as
it was in 1945.

One of the most unusual memorials was the one which opened in Berlin on May 8,
2002. Called the 'Deserters Memorial', it is dedicated to
the 232 German soldiers, the youngest 18, who were shot for desertion in the closing
stages of the war. Realizing that the war was lost they threw away their arms and
deserted. All were rounded up and faced a military court which sentenced them all
to death. The punishment was legal according to German military law at the time.
After the verdicts the 232 men were taken to the Wehrmacht training ground behind
the Waldbϋhne sports complex in Berlin and shot. In Germany there is a law which forbids the building of memorials to its
fighting troops of World War 11.

ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY

America's most famous military cemetery, comprising 657 acres, is situated on
a hillside overlooking the Potomac River in Washing DC. In this beautifully landscaped
area the focal point is Arlington House where Robert E Lee, of Confederate Army
fame, lived for thirty years of his life. Requisitioned by the Union Army for a
military cemetery during the American Civil War the cemetery now contains over 240,000
graves. The first burial took place on May 13, 1864, when Private William Christman,
a soldier of the 67th Pennsylvania Infantry, was laid to rest. In the Memorial Amphitheatre
is the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from World War I. In front of the tomb are two
sunken crypts, one containing the remains of an Unknown Soldier from World War II,
the other containing the remains of an Unknown Soldier from the Korean War. There
is no Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from the Vietnam War as each soldier who fought
and died in that conflict has been identified. Instead a special plaque dedicated
to those who died was unveiled on November 11, 1978, by President Jimmy Carter.
Also here, lie the remains of 364 Congressional Medal of Honor
recipients including America's most decorated soldier, Audie L. Murphy. A
total of 433 US soldiers were awarded the medal for services during
World War II. Foreigners can be awarded the Medal of Honor provided
they are a member of the US Armed Forces. They are not required to be a US citizen.

KRANJI WAR CEMETERY

Situated near the Naval Base on Singapore Island, 22
kilometres north of Singapore City, the former military camp became a military cemetery
containing the graves of around 6,000 servicemen who died fighting in the Far East.
These include 4,461 British Commonwealth graves, 850 of which are unidentified.
From 1936 to 1941 the site became the largest ammunition dump in Asia. Just before
the capitulation the British blew up the dump to prevent it falling into the hands
of the approaching Japanese forces. When Singapore fell, the Japanese established
a P.O.W. camp on the site and after reoccupation the prisoners developed a small
cemetery in the camp which was later enlarged by the Army Grave Service. At the
rear of the cemetery are twelve large columns on which are inscribed the names of
around 56,000 servicemen and women who have no known grave. These include the names
of those who met their deaths on the Japanese Hell Ships.

WAR CRIMES TRIALS (Europe)

The Nürnberg International Military Tribunal began on
November 20, 1945. It was conducted in four languages, English. French, Russian
and German. The trials lasted ten months in which it held a total of 403 sessions.
Twenty surviving leaders of the Third Reich were arraigned before the Allied judges
as major war criminals. All pleaded 'Not Guilty'. Ten were hanged on 16th October,
1946, seven were given prison sentences ranging from ten years to life, and three
were acquitted. Two, Herman Göring and
Robert Ley committed suicide during the trial. It is doubtful that Göring
would have taken his own life if the Tribunal had granted him his most cherished
wish, to die like a soldier in front of a firing squad. Forty Allied officers,
including four Generals, one each from Britain, America, France and the Soviet Union,
witnessed the executions. Also present were two newspapermen from each nationality
as well as the camera crews and lighting technicians. The hangings were conducted
by US Master Sergeant John C. Wood of San Antonio, Texas, a professional hangman
in civil life with 299 executions to his credit. Thirty-three witnesses gave oral
evidence for the prosecution against the defendants and sixty-one witnesses gave
evidence for the defence. Written evidence was given by 143 witnesses for the defence.
A total of 1,809 affidavits from other witnesses were also submitted. Everything
said at the trial was stenographically and electrically recorded. The
United Nations War Crimes Commission was established in
London on October 7, 1942, with the support of seventeen other Allied governments.
On August 8, 1945, Britain, America, France and Russia signed the London Agreement
setting up the N.I.M.T. to bring the top leaders of Hitler's Germany to trial.

The evidence against the defendants were, in most cases, documents
of their own making on which their own signatures were proved authentic. Some historians
believe that the hanging of General Jodl was a miscarriage of justice but by signing
Hitler's order to have fifty prisoners of war shot for escaping from Sagan, sealed
his fate.

Senior surviving Nazis got rough justice indeed at the widely-condemned Nürnberg
Tribunal. These "Victor's Justice" propaganda show trials were unique in history,
complete with fake "Jewish Skin" lampshade exhibits; a German-hating "impartial
American judicial team" made up almost entirely of European Jews; barefaced
lies, perjury and third-hand hearsay testimony. Most damning of all: widespread,
unchallenged torture 'confessions' written in detailed English by non-English
speaking German defendants.

PRISON FOR SEVEN

On July 18, 1947, a DC-3 landed at the Royal Air Force
airfield, at Gatow, near Berlin, formally Kladow Airfield,
in the late afternoon. In the plane were seven high ranking Nazis convicted to terms
of imprisonment at Nuremberg. The seven were Baldur von Schirach, Gross Admiral
Karl Donitz, Konstantin von Neurath, Admiral Erich Raeder, Albert Speer, Walter
Funk and Rudolf Hess. They were then driven in a bus with blacked out windows to
No. 23 Wilhelmstrasse in Spandau, better known as Spandau Prison. Built to hold
600 prisoners it now contained only seven prisoners guarded by 78 persons including
32 armed guards, 18 warders and 28 ancillary staff. Prisoners were given the same
rations as German civilians. Talking to each other was forbidden, except in the
garden. German newspapers were only allowed after May, 1954. Reveille was at 6am
and lights out at 10pm. Albert Speer has calculated that he has walked a distance
of 31,936 kilometres round the garden in his effort to keep fit during the twenty
years he spent in Spandau. After the longest serving prisoner, Rudolf Hess, died
in August 1987, the prison complex was demolished, the thousands of tons of rubble
buried in the shooting range at RAF Gatow. The site was redeveloped as the Britannia
Centre, a community centre for British garrison troops in Berlin. It contained a
NAAFI superstore and a picture theatre named Jerboa Cinema, the name taken from
the Jerboa Cinema that was situated next to the former British NAAFI Club on the
Reichskanzler Platz. (Previously Adolf Hitler Platz, now Theodor Heuss Platz).

WAR CRIMES TRIALS (EAST)

The Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal convened on May 3, 1946,
and adjourned on November 12. 1948. Twenty-eight Japanese military and civilian
leaders were put on trial for war crimes. Conducted by eleven Justices and presided
over by Justice Webb of Australia, eleven of the defendants were found guilty and
sentenced to death by hanging, the executions taking place in Sugamo Prison on December
23. 1948. Among those executed was General Hidaki Tojo, former commander of the
Kuantung Army and later Prime Minister of Japan. Outside the Tokyo trials there
were more than 2,000 other trials involving 5.379 Japanese. 148 Koreans, 173 Formosans
(Class B and C war criminals). These trials were conducted in forty-nine locations.
Over 4,300 individuals were convicted of war crimes of whom 984 were sentenced to
death. The rest to terms of imprisonment ranging from life for 475 and shorter terms
of imprisonment for 2,944. China held thirteen war crimes trials which resulted
in 504 convictions and 149 death sentences.

DEATH SENTENCES

In the US Zone of Germany, 462 major war criminals were sentenced to death in
1945. In the British Zone, 240 received the death penalty and in the French Zone
the number was 104. Of the 806 death sentences imposed by the western allies only
about 400 were actually carried out. In the forty years since 1945, around 5,000
war criminals were hunted down, tried and executed. The search continues to this
day.

CAMOUFLAGE LANGUAGE

In many documents discovered after the war, it is interesting to see how SS unit
commanders reported their operations to their leaders, Himmler and Heydrich. After
the German invasion of the Soviet Union, reports flooded in describing the systematic
mass killing of Jews, partisans and others by SS death squads (Einzatzcommando).
Some 195 documents were found to contain words that have been described as
"camouflage language". A few unit commanders, no doubt the
more fanatical Nazi types, used plain language in describing their activities, for
instance, the words shooting, killing, and hanging, left little doubt about what
they were doing. In other reports we find the words: liquidated, cleansed, annihilated,
resettled, deported, collective punishment and that ominous phrases "subjected to
special treatment" and "executed according to martial law". Towns,
reported "free of Jews" were said to mean that the entire Jewish population had
either been killed or transported to concentration camps.

RE-ENACTMENT FOR FILM

One evening in the summer of 1946, some members of the Chancellery
Group, those who were captured in May, 1945 by the Russians in and around
Hitler's bunker in the grounds of the Reich Chancellery,
were flown back to Berlin from their prisons in the Soviet Union.
In Berlin they were made to re-enact the events of the last day
in the Bunker for a Russian film company. They were in Berlin for some twenty-four
hours before being flown back to Moscow, there to remain in various prisons for
the next ten years. The film 'actors' that day included Hans Baur, Heinz Lange,
Major Guenche, General Mohnke and Sergeant Rochus Misch the SS telephonist. For
the first time, an information panel, with maps and images, has now been erected
on the site of the former bunker to show visitors the exact location.
(Many photographs shown in history books today are actually re-enactments
of the actual incident where it would have been too dangerous at the time to record
the scene on film.)

P.O.W. DEATH RATE

A total of 7,310 British prisoners of war died while in German captivity and
12,443 died while in Japanese captivity. Of an estimated 350,000 prisoners captured
by the Japanese in WWII, 35,756 died, a death rate of 10.2%. Of the 235,473 prisoners
interned by Germany and Italy, 9,348 died, a death rate of 4%. At midnight on
August 14/15, 1945, the unconditional surrender of Japan
is announced by the American President Truman and the British Prime Minister Atlee.
World War II was over. (This war was unnecessarily prolonged by
the short-sighted insistance by the Allies for 'unconditional surrender'.)

KILLED BY THEIR OWN COUNTRYMEN

Twelve French volunteers in the German Waffen SS (33rd SS Grenadier Division
'Charlemagne') who had fought on the Eastern Front were in a hospital in Bavaria
when the war ended. They surrendered to French soldiers under the command of General
Philippe Leclerc, the liberator of Paris. Accusing them of being traitors to France,
Leclerc ordered them shot, their bodies left lying on the ground to be discovered
some days later by US troops and buried. Years later their bodies were recovered
and reinterred in the local cemetery. Inscribed on a memorial above the graves are
the words "To The Twelve Brave Sons Of France, Prisoners Of The
Victors, Who Were Executed Without Judgement".

MERRY CHRISTMAS

Just before Christmas, 1946, the ban on fraternization
between German Prisoners of War and British civilians was finally lifted. Invitations
poured into P.O.W. camps in Britain from British families eager to invite the P.O.W.s
into their homes for Christmas, the first real Christmas the prisoners had experienced
in years. The last of German P.O.W.s were repatriated by the end of 1948 but around
24,000 decided to stay in Britain rather than return to their homes now in the communist
zone of East Germany. Many of those who stayed behind ended up marrying British
girls and raising families.

WWII LEGALLY ‘ENDS’ IN DECEMBER 1947

Although the war
officially ended on August 14, 1945, Britain extended this
date to December 31, 1947, as a cut-off date. This extension
was introduced to make allowance for the many casualties who died from wounds received
during the true war period to be classified as war dead.

GERMANIA

In 2002, on an island in the middle of the 115 square kilometer
Mueritzsee Lake, the largest in Mecklenburg and sixty miles
from Berlin, amateur historians discovered the only building Hitler ever saw completed
for Germania, the name he would have given
Berlin after it was rebuilt. This was a prototype of the
bomb-proof apartments he wanted to construct for the workers building the new capitol
that would rule Europe. Known as the 'White House' or Festwork-T,
it is the only surviving example of the type of architecture that the German Führer
would have dominated the new capitol with after the 'final victory'.

POST-WAR

When the European war ended, the great debate began. What had turned young men
into unthinking slaves of evil? What happened to make them susceptible to the lust
for power, to loose all sense of right and wrong, to commit acts of such unspeakable
bestiality, to fight with such fanatical courage and without question to carry out
the orders of their unscrupulous leaders? After the war, hundreds of non-Nazi priests,
doctors, and psychiatrists were interviewed and not one could report a single instance
of confession to the criminal acts in which they, the perpetrators, participated.
When, on May 23, 1945, SS Führer and Gestapo Police Chief, Heinrich Himmler, gave
himself up to British Military Police at Bremervörde and then committed suicide
by biting on a phial of cyanide hidden between his teeth, the terrifying bloody
history of Hitler's SS came to an end. But its evil deeds will
for ever stand as a warning to all nations and in particular to the new generations
growing up in Germany. As the terrible events of World War II recede
more and more into the past, the average German person is less and less inclined
to feel a sense of individual guilt for the past. The younger generation, quite
rightly, asks "why should I feel guilty? I was not born then."

DIENSTGRUPPEN

The German word for Service Groups. This relates to the 70,000 German P.O.W.s
and other nationals still in uniform and engaged in post-war operations including
mine clearing and guard duties in Northern Germany in 1947. Germans at that
time, and even now, were convinced that this para-military force of 81,358 members,
called the Black Reichswehr by the Germans, was really a reserve force kept
in readiness for a possible war with Russia.

THE INTERNATIONAL TRACING SERVICE

Originally the Tracing Bureau of the British Red Cross and later the Central
Tracing Bureau created by SHAEF in 1944 at Frankfurt-am Main. It later moved to
Bad Arlosen in 1946 where it remains to this day under the management of the International
Red Cross since 1955. Comprising 26,000 metres of shelf space it contains over fifty
million reference cards for over 17.5 million persons who were held in Nazi prisons
and concentration camps. The cards also contain details of forced labourers and
displaced persons. In 2007, the Bureau received over 61,000 requests from seventy
countries for information on long lost family members.

It was here in the octagonal shaped downstairs room of the villa at 31a Uelzener
Strasse, Luneburg, that Himmler committed suicide while being searched. This
interrogation centre was set up by the British Second Army HQ Defence Company
and it was here also that Mrs Margaret Joyce, wife of William Joyce (Lord Haw
Haw) was interrogated by MI5 and held for six days after her arrest.